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Our magazine is published on the lands of the Bunurong Boon Wurrung and Wurundjeri Woi Wurrung peoples of the Eastern Kulin Nation, and we wish to acknowledge them as Traditional Owners. We pay our respects to their elders, past, present and emerging.
While Iām out, Iāll no doubt be distracted by the alluring gaze of our September cover star, Marlon Williams, the most romantic offering from across the ditch since Fred Dagg. Also within; Isabella Manfredi revels in her emancipation from The Preatures (āno shit - I wrote the songsā) and we talk to renowned dancer Rodney Bell, one of the leading lights of Alter State, a powerful disability-led festival coming to Melbourne throughout September. We also chat to Melbourne noise rockers CLAMM and pop-experimentalist TAMS/N OTWAY, go loco for Italo-Disco, imitate art with the very real Come From Away, and embrace more Cash Savagery than a $2 7-Eleven coffee. Thatās us done for the month. Weāll do a Sticky Fingers, drop the mic and fuck off now.
Acknowledgement of Traditional Owners
About bloody time. After years of avoiding this plague-ridden city, thereās a good enough reason to risk my life by leaving my eight-person sharehouse - I can finally have a valet park my bicycle when Iām having caviar bumps and reminiscing over the Melbourne Star in Docklands, or as I like to call it, Vue du Docks.
COVERSOCIALS
BEAT.COM.AU08 EDITOR Lucas Radbourne ASSISTANT EDITORĀ Talia Rinaldo SUB-EDITOR Sidonie Bird de la Coeur GRAPHIC DESIGNER Nathan Mossop GIG GUIDE Jacob Colliver CONTRIBUTORS Ben Lamb, Tammy Walters, Sose Fuamoli, Kosa Monteith, Andrew Handley, James Robertson, Bryget Chrisfield, Alexia Petsinis, Coco Veldkamp FOR ADVERTISING OR SPONSORED CONTENT ENQUIRIES advertise@furstmedia.com.au ACCOUNTS accounts@furstmedia.com.au DISTRIBUTION distribution@furstmedia.com.au PUBLISHER Furst Media Pty Ltd 03 9428 3600 FOUNDER Rob Furst
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BEAT MAG09 CONTENTS News 10, Marlon Williams 16, Arts Guide 18, Alter State 20, Festival Guide 22, Isabella Manfredi 24, Stage Guide 26, Come From Away 28, Chapel Sessions, TAMS/N OTWAY 29, Italo Disco 30, CLAMM 32, Album Reviews 34, Section 8 + Northcote Social Club 36, The Night Cat + Yorkshire Stingo 37, Cash Savage 38, Gig Guide 41 beat.com.au 314 ā 316 SYDNEY ROAD, BRUNSWICK, MELBOURNE | 03 9387 1347 | BRUNSWICKBALLROOM.COM.AU MATT WALKER With special guest Jacky Winter Ornithology 09/09 DOORS 6.30PM // KITCHEN OPEN // SHOW STARTS 8PM MELBOURNE IN 60 SECONDS Featuring Rebecca Barnard, Mick Thomas, LIttle Wise & More 18/09 // DOORS 5PM // KITCHEN OPEN // SHOW STARTS 5.30PM THE SONGS OF KATE BUSH Atlanta Coogan with full band perform 25/09 // DOORS 4PM // KITCHEN OPEN // SHOW STARTS 5PM




Bestselling author, podcaster, Ted Talk star, psychotherapist and relationship expert Esther Perel will embark on her first-ever Australia/New Zealand speaking tour across November and December. It will be her first visit back since her appearance at Sydneyās Vivid Ideas festival in 2019, which sold out in a matter of hours. THE GIGS GO TO 303.NET.AU/GIGS-EVENTS
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Worldās biggest monster truck event coming to Melbourne Dust off the trucker cap and chuck on your best flanny, Monster Jam is the worldās biggest monster truck spectac ular and itās coming to Melbourneās AAMI Park on October 1.
Daniel Johns announces Melbourne art exhibition Past, Present & FutureNever runs in Melbourne from 26 August ā 9 October 2022. Exploring the height of ā90s Australian grunge culture through to Johnsā latest album, the showcase is set to unlock the vault of personal memora bilia from the rockstar and introduce an array of experiential exhibits from the future.
Oz Kink Fest are hosting a Fetish Expo in Collingwood The Melbourne Fetish Expo is coming to the Collingwood Town Hall on October 15. With kinky exhibitors, fashion shows and over 60 stalls, itās an expo dedicated toĀ educating, celebrating and de-stigma tising fetishes and alternative lifestyles. Theyāre also hosting an After Party on that same evening.
The stars of seasons one and two ofĀ RuPaulās Drag Race Down UnderĀ are appearing live on stage at St Kildaās Palais Theatre. The Australian iteration of the insanely successful reality competition showĀ RuPaulās Drag Race,Ā you can catch some of the competitors live on stage on October 14 for a fabulous evening of some of Australiaās best drag artists.
NGV to host Australiaās largest AR art trail A collaboration between Fed Square, Koorie Heritage Trust, ACMI and NGV has created the cityās largest, free augmented reality (AR) art trail. From a floating human skull to a neon pink warrior, visitors to the NGV can experience eye-popping digital artworks by leading Australian and international contemporary artists as part of the digital exhibition.
RuPaulās Drag Race Down Under is on stage
303 HIGH ST 303THEBARBAR303NOTHCOTENORTHCOTE THURSDAY 8TH SEPTEMBER DAG + SCREEN PLAY + CRISIS ACTOR 7:30PM FRIDAY 9TH SEPTEMBER MOUNT KUJO 8PM, PAYF SATURDAY 10TH SEPTEMBER PINKO COLLECTIVE 3:30PM, FREE MORTAL CADENCE 8PM, $10 EVERY MONDAY IN SEPTEMBER BOHJASS JAZZHUB 6PM, $5 TUESDAY 13TH SEPTEMBER KLUB MUK 7:30PM, FREE EVERY WEDNESDAY IN SEPTEMBER SNAJ 8PM THURSDAY 15TH SEPTEMBER ARTIE STYLES QUARTET 8PM, $10 FRIDAY 16TH SEPTEMBER SKABHANGERS 7:30PM, PAYF SATURDAY 17TH SEPTEMBER THE SOUL-LUTION EP LAUNCH 7PM, $15 SUNDAY 18TH SEPTEMBER OSCAR & BEBRA 3:30PM, $10 TUESDAY 20TH SEPTEMBER YARRA BANKS JAM 8PM, FREE THURSDAY 22ND SEPTEMBER CAT & BULL CLUB 7:30PM FRIDAY 23RD SEPTEMBER THE SPACEFUNK ENSEMBLE + BENG + POCKĆ 7:30PM SATURDAY 24TH SEPTEMBER HOMEBASS 8PM TUESDAY 27TH SEPTEMBER SMILING POLITELY COMEDY 7:30PM, $5 THURSDAY 29TH SEPTEMBER āKICKIN THE B AT 303ā THURSDAY HAMMOND SESSIONS: DIVE TEAM FIVE 8PM DOORS, $20 FRIDAY 30TH SEPTEMBER FIRETAIL 8PM NEWS
Swedish synth-pop star Tove Lo announces Australian tour Grammy-nominated Swedish electropop artist Tove Lo has announced an Australian headline tour with Melbourne and Sydney sideshows to Listen Out. The multi-platinum selling artist will play 170 Russell in Melbourne on Wednesday 28 September.
Beyond The Valley reveals full lineup Nelly Furtado, Bicep, Dom Dolla, Kaytranada, BENEE, Yeat, Flight Facilities, Honey Dijon, Lime Cordiale, Denzel Curry, Yeat, Patrick Topping, Charlotte De Witte and many more headline Beyond The Valleyās 2022/23 New Yearās Eve festiv ities at their new home in Barunah Plains. Let Them Eat Cake drops 2023 lineup ANNA, Bonobo, DJ Koze, Elkka, Gerd Janson, KiNK (Live), KornĆ©l KovĆ”cs, Moxie, Papa Smurf and Stephan Bodzin lead the Werribee Mansion New Yearās Day festival in 2023.
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Esther Perel announces Australian speaking tour
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NGV reveals 2022 spring and summer exhibitions NGV has revealed nine 2022 spring and summer exhibitions including China ā The past is present and Freedom of Movement . The blockbuster will be a retrospective of fashion designer Alexander McQueen titled Alexander McQueen: Mind, Mythos, Muse.
ALWAYS LIVE announces 2022 lineup Dua Lipa, Crowded House, Sampa the Great, Big Thief, Toro y Moi, Claptone, Yothu Yindi, Sophie Ellis-Bextor, The Pharcyde, Frente and many more will play Victorian shows across October, November and December dates.






The Meanies are set to play shows in Geelong and Melbourne this month around the release of a new 7ā single and ahead of a tour of Spain. Local indie Fantastic Mess Records will be releasing the new single āOld Car to Shangri-Laā to coincide, taken from The Meaniesā latest album.
Australiaās largest Greek festival is happening in October Featuring market stalls, live music, dance and cultural performances, Antipodes Festival is a huge celebration of Greek culture, set to take over the entirety of Lonsdale Street in the CBD for two huge days of festivities on Saturday October 22 and Sunday October 23. There will be over 90 stalls to peruse, roving perform ers, a zorba ātil you drop contest, songs by Greek performers, a pasito cooking competition and much, much more.
The Tesselaar Tulip Festival runs over four weeks from September 10 ā October 9 in Silvan, with themed weeks and weekends, including a Turkish Weekend, Spring Fever Weeks, Dutch Weekend, Rock The Fields Weekend and a Food, Wine and Jazz weekend, among others.
Bricktionary: Melbourne Museum announces Lego exhibition From life-sized animals to fashion and fantasy, some of the biggest and best Lego creations will exhibit at Melbourne Museum from Saturday 3 September, featuring 150 models and over a million Lego bricks. Hello Sunshine: The new RangesDandenongmusicfestival
Legendary Melbourne punks The Meanies announce tour
Hello Sunshine is a new music festival happening in Scoresby on February 11, 2023. Headlined by Amy Shark, The Cat Empire, Pierce Brothers, 360, Murray āThe Original Red Wiggleā, Yo! Mafia and Cadence, other fun attractions include amusement rides, multicultural food trucks, a fireworks display, market stalls and more.
Tesselaar Tulip Festival returns this month
Fringe Festival announces 40th anniversary program Melbourne Fringe Festival has revealed its massive 40th anniversary program that will run between October 6 - 23 this year. After a 21-year hiatus, the Fringe Parade will return for one year only in Lygon Street, while thereāll be major installations at the State Library, Prahran Square, Queen Victoria Market, and the festivalās headquarters at Trades Hall.
Maksim Mrvica is coming to Melbourne in September Selling over four million copies of his albums across 57 countries, heās recognised internationally as the worldās highest selling crossover pianist. For the first time in three years, the Croatian pianist is returning to Australia and New Zealand this September.
OPEN 5 DAYS 6PMīæ11PM
Johnston Street favourite Thank You Bar is closing down A favourite of Abbotsford residents since they opened their doors in January 2020, the cosy bar and bottleshop has closed its doors.Ā With a great courtyard to chill and drink a wine or two in, as well as DJs spinning tunes live on their decks, it was a great place to hang out that will be sorely missed. The space is being taken over by a bar called Panacea Bar.
Melbourne International Jazz Festival announces 2022 program Melbourne International Jazz Festival returns from 14 ā 23 October in 2022 with 400 artists and the festivalās first international lineup in three years. It will be staged at venues across the city, with Lalah Hathaway the major headliner.
Light Music to take place at ACMI A collaboration between Liquid Architecture and Light, Light Music takes place as a part of Light: Works from Tateās Collection. Inspired by Lis Rhodesā 1975 film Light Music - a response to what she perceived as the lack of attention paid to female composers in European music ā a collective for artists working with Liquid Architecture are putting on a one-off performance inspired by the film. Presented in ACMIās Gallery 3 as a part of Light: Works from Tateās Collection, the one-off performance takes place on Saturday October 15 at 8pm.
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White Night to host afterdark program in Geelong Geelongās White Night on October 8 will feature over 50 large-scale works comprising live music, projections, instal lations, video and more featuring over 300 local and international artists, 70% of which are based in regional Victoria.
Australiaās largest regional LGBTQI+ festival returns to Daylesford Celebrating 26 years in 2023, Australiaās longest-running and largest regional pride festival will take place in regional Victoriaās LGBTQIA mecca of Daylesford once again, with next yearās incarnation set to bring more music, more dancing, and of course, lots of fun. Inviting visitors of all ages to dance, prance, chill and shake a tail feather across five days of fabulous festivity, the festival has locked in its dates for 2023, running from March 9 ā March 13 2023 (Labour Day weekend).
Jeremy Zucker announces Australian tour Jeremy Zucker has announced an Australian tour with Melbourne, Sydney, Perth and Brisbane shows across September and October. Amassing over five billion global streams since 2017, heāll play Recital Centre on October 1.
Meredith Music Festival drops massive 2022 lineup
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Meredith Music Festival has dropped its mammoth 2022 lineup with Caribou, Courtney Barnett, Yothu Yindi and Dry Cleaning headlining. It goes down from December 9 - 11.
The London Symphony Orchestra have announced an Australian tour for April and May in 2023. This will be the first Australian tour by the LSO since 2014 and only their fourth trip Down Under in their 120-year history. The LSO made its Australian debut in 1966 and also toured in 1983.
Hundreds of grasshoppers are being released into Royal Park
NGV announces free new Fred Williams exhibition
The Flying Duck is set to reopen Transforming the venue to include an 84-seat open-plan dining room, the team behind the Hobsons Bay Hotel have signed the lease on this Melbourne pub. Blending the lines between pub and restaurant, the venue is being operated by Rusticaās founder and Supernormalās former head chef. Theyāre set to re-open their doors to Prahran in spring this year. Hours 5-11pm Kitchen till 11pm, Open Daily Live Music Fri, Sat & Sun All gigs
Free Entry SATURDAY 3RD SEP Mantis and the Prayer 8pm SUNDAY 4TH SEP Old Exchange 5pm FRIDAY 9TH SEP Daniel Reeves Band 8pm SATURDAY 10TH SEP Zak Shepherd Trio 8pm SUNDAY 11TH SEP Rosario De Marco 5pm FRIDAY 16TH SEP Supay Veron 8pm SATURDAY 17TH SEP Katankin 8pm SUNDAY 18TH SEP Kelsey Jean 5pm Raphael Love 6pm LeoFRIDAYNazz23RD SEP Bret Mosley 8pm SATURDAY 24TH SEP Frank Bell 8pm SUNDAY 25TH SEP Gold Gull Duo 5pm
Hundreds of tiny, flightless grasshoppers will be released into Melbourneās Royal Park, as part of a pilot project addressing the biodiversity emergency. The experi mental translocation is the councilās first-ever attempt at reintroducing a locally extinct species.
Prahran favourite pub
The exhibition explores the range and power of Williamās drawings from this formative period through some 160 drawings of extraordinary calligraphic energy. These include superb series of works that Williams made in Londonās music halls, at the zoo, on the city streets, and in formal life drawing classes.
Midnight Oil announce final Melbourne, Sydney shows Midnight Oil have announced two special final shows in both Melbourne and Sydney, playing 10-1 in its entirety. Theyāll play The Palais Theatre on September 12 and 14. A Monet exhibition is coming to The Lume Their newest season at The Lume,Ā Monet and Friends AliveĀ brings Monet and other famous French Impressionist painters to life at Melbourneās first permanent digital gallery. The exhibition is set to open on October 26.
Polo G announces debut Melbourne, Sydney shows Polo G has announced two Australian headline shows for the Chicago based hitmaker, at Sydneyās Enmore Theatre on Tuesday 27 September and The Forum, Melbourne on Wednesday 28 September, as well as Listen Out Festival.






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Classic rock drama Rolling Thunder Vietnam returns to Melbourne
Melbourneās Channel 31 and Adelaideās Channel 44 have launched the CTV+ app, the first Australian broadcast streaming service to feature 100% Australian-made and produced content.
Chapel Street Festival will finally return Itās been 20 years since the last street festival was held on the iconic strip and the next iteration is planned for late 2023. The street festival will celebrate the unique character of the precinct, with areas showcasing fashion, art, music and food.
The indie legends will be heading to Melbourne, Adelaide, Brisbane, Newcastle and Sydney in November and December. Theyāll be playing the Palais Theatre on Sunday November 27.
The state government are throwing a massive summer street party on the corner of Melbourneās Gertrude and Smith Streets on February 12 2023, featuring live performances from artists and a celebration of LGBTIQ+ arts and culture.
Jackson Browne announces Australian tour Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Songwriterās Hall of Fame inductee Jackson Browne will return with his full band to tour Australia and New Zealand in April 2023, performing five special headline shows andĀ Christchurch.Ā ourne,Ā Sydney,Ā Auckland,Ā Wellington,inĀ Perth,Ā Melb
The Parthenon is coming to Melbourne at the NGV
A war drama with a classic rock soundtrack, āRolling Thunder Vietnamā has announced dates for its 2023 return. It will play Frankston Arts Centre and the Palais Theatre in June 2023. New four-storey rooftop bar for Chapel Street This September, South Yarra sees the arrival of Stella, a multi-storey hospitality venue on the prominent corner of Chapel and Grosvenor Street, set to deliver an Italian food philosophy with a modern Australian twist, alongside a collection of signature drinks and stellar rooftop vistas.
SHIT PUB TRIVIA
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A debauched kabarett is coming to Melbourne in October Itās Melbourne Fringeās 40th birthday and Bernie Dieter is bringing her über award-winning den of inequity to magnif icent Magic Mirrors Spiegeltent at Queen Victoria Market. Glittery, glamorous, satirical and salacious, it all goes down from October 6 until October 30. Itās sold out across Fringe Festivals around the world, so make sure to get in fast before this sells out too.
WEEKLY ON WEDNESDAY NIGHTS KICKS OFF AT 7:30PM $60 BAR VOUCHER FOR ALL 3 ROUND WINNERS STINGO BLUES LIVE BLUES MUSIC EVERY SUNDAY ARVO AT THE STINGO - 4:30PM - HEADLINER FROM 6:30 MUSICIANS, COME ALONG AND JOIN THE JAM!
The NGV have announced their Architecture Commission for 2022: a reimagining of The Parthenon on the Acropolis in Athens called āTemple of Boomā. The likeness of The Parthenon will be painted with overlapping large-scale artworks by Melbourne-based artists.
The Wombats announce intimate Australian tour
Thereās a huge street party happening in summer
Docklands to introduce valets to park bicycles To encourage more visitors to Melbourneās CBD ā in particular the still struggling Docklands area ā the City of Melbourne have announced a new wave of funding for activation programs, ranging from floral garden pop-ups along the river, to a valet program that parks visitorsā bicycles for them throughout September.
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Channel 31 launch streaming service
Chi Wow Wah Town is returning in November Along with a killer lineup of acts including Bushwacka!, Infusion, Robag Wruhme, Elif and more, for an array of local and international deep house, techno and ambient performances across three stages. It takes place over the weekend of November 18 ā 20, for three days of music, art and performance.
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āThereās a few learning curves going on,ā he admits. āItās quite hard jumping from TV land to flying out to Europe the next day and putting on my music hat, then doing the same thing again at the other end. Itās good [though], Iāve learned lessons!ā Weāre mere weeks out from the release of Williamsā third studio album, My Boy, when we speak. Although promoting new music is something Williams is familiar with, this record in particular feels like new territory because in a lot of ways, it is. The album emphasises the chameleonic and playful nature of Williamsā songwriting that has been present throughout his catalogue. Yet with My Boy, this nature is pushed to prominence in a way that positions Williams beneath what is perhaps the most revealing of creative spotlights yet. To properly enjoy the album is to let yourself become completely wrapped up in the lofty and escapist nature of it.
Words by Sosefina Fuamoli
WILLIAMSMARLON
Early singles such as āMy Boyā, āThinking Of Ninaā; as well as more recent drops āRiver Rivalā and āEasy Does Itā demonstrate Williamsā dynamism as a songwriter, ratcheted up some notches
From the comfort of his home on Aotearoaās South Island, Marlon Williams looks refreshed for someone who has recently returned from a bout of international touring and completing a movie shoot, all the while preparing for the release of a new album.
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āEven that in itself is such a beautiful thing because it makes you reframe all of these lines, the layers of ironyā¦thereās so much depth there that will never be exhausted. Thereās also the realisation that there are so many songs that, excitingly, donāt have melodies. Thereās a real treasury of Maori music thatās waiting to be reshaped and brought back into the light again. Thereās some anthologising that needs to happen and itās exciting to be part of that.ā
āThe more you know, the more ignorant you are; itās a beautiful thing too. Iām enjoying the mistakes and the way Iām learning things along the way. Iām excited for the rest of my musical life, to have this increasingly feed into my existence.
āIām super excited about taking these songs back to The Benders and navigating it with them,ā he adds. āA lot of it is going to be difficult to fully represent live, but thatās part of the fun and challenge. I canāt wait.ā
āI needed to be the new kid at school again and be able to be contradictoryopenlyofmy past self in some way, in some hopes of self-escape or escape of a world that myself and the Benders had created.ā
My Boy together through the final months of 2022 before select Australian appearances in the summer, Williams felt it necessary to break out of the artistic mould he had curated for himself across six years of releases and relentless touring.
It can be heard throughout My Boy. There are moments of isolation, balanced beautifully with moments of romanticism and hope. Its sonic scope feels more expansive than previous Marlon Williams records ā a reflection of how the artistās own vision for his output moving forward has evolved as well.
āOne of the best parts about all of this has been being at home and being able to connect ā itās an increasingly humbling experience,ā he says of his te reo MÄori journey.
āThereās certainly a lot about the world that made me feel detached,ā Williams says of the different mental places My Boy took him. āMusic is one of the only places I can cling to like a lifeboat.āāIcan cling to it and know that in some ways, itās safe from the rigour and pressures of whatās going on in the world. It became a haven where it was impervious to the changes around it. It was a way of charting my own lockdown journey; there are a lot of stories about being alone and idle wanderings of the mind that are scattered across the record.ā
BEAT MAG17 in offering the listener an intriguing insight into the writer he has become in the time heās been away. Reflecting on the process of creating an album such as this against a backdrop of a national lockdown, a global pandemic, and the stripping away of the normalcy of life as heād become used to, Williams explains that My Boy ā though definitely a swerve in sonic direction ā had less surprises in store during its actualāListeningcreation.back to it, there are things that do stick out to me but when youāre in the moment and in the flow of things, nothing shocks you because youāre feeling your way through it as youāThego.writing happened over a while and I went through a lot of different versions of things; I had more time to overthink things and go in differ ent directions. The time factor meant that things had more room to branchRecordedout.ā in Auckland at Neil Finnās Roundhouse Studios in late 2020, Williams took the concept of ābranching outā literally, Bendersandbringstudioofenvironmentoverturningcompletelyhisusualinfavouranewlineupofmusicianstohisideastolife.ThoughWilliamshisband-TheYarra-willtour
āIām reading this essay at the moment about the frequency of certain phrases throughout the history of traditional Maori music and what the cliches of the genre are.
A significant part of said process has seen Williams delve back into his cultural studies, strengthening his grasp on te reo MÄori and eventually, bringing the language further into his music. In weaving the traditional and contemporary with his art, and taking the language of ancestors with him into his life, Williams knows heās locked something special within himself.
The forced time at home for Williams meant that pace could slow and with it, a period of reconnection, rediscovery and rejuvenation could eventually be embraced.
Marlon Williams is playing a special, intimate show at Howler on Friday September 9 with a full album tour soon to be announced. My Boy will be released via Virgin.
Since the release of Make Way For Love, Williamsā profile became solidified internationally, largely thanks to his flour ishing acting career with performances in Bradley Cooperās A Star Is Born, Justin Kurzelās True History Of The Kelly Gang and Netflix fantasy drama Sweet Tooth, establishing Williams as not just a charismatic musician with intrigue; but an emerging artisticRemainingmulti-threat.inAotearoa throughout the onset of the pandemic ā while stifling in many ways ā did bring its benefits for
So for My Boy, he called on the talents of drummer Paul Taylor (Feist), bassist Cass Michell (Ladyhawke, Tiny Ruins), Tom Healy (Tiny Ruins, The Chills); as well as frequent collaborator Delaney Davidson, Elroy Finn and the only other Aotearoa-based Yarra Bender, Dave Khan, to flesh the music out.
āIt was a weird and hard thing, to go away from using The Yarra Benders, but that was kind of the point,ā Williams admits. āI needed to be the new kid at school again and be able to be openly contradictory of my past self in some way, in some hopes of self-escape or escape of a world that myself and the Benders had created. āIt was difficult then having to work out new dynamics in the studio. I at least knew all of the people who were coming into play, whether or not Iād ever worked with them.ā
Considering the huge success of his sophomore album Make Way For Love in 2018 and the trajectory Williamsā career took in the year that would follow, itās unsurprising that he might want to take a beat when it came to his next musical chapter.
Williams and ultimately, the process spurring on this new album.

GUIDEARTS Exhibitions to see in September
States of Disruption is happening at the Centre for Contemporary Photography throughout September.
Words by Ben Lamb States of Disruption
Double Moon is taking place at the Heide Museum of Modern Art throughout September.
Australian Paul Yoreās work is some of the most colourful and wonderful within the industry - you can easily get lost in the shapes and colours he uses. His new exhi bition Word Made Flesh will celebrate all of his work, featuring a great collection of his quilts, needlework, banners, pendants and collages, and his popular large media installations. Itās self-described as a gesamtkunstwerk, a German term defined as a ātotal work of artā.
Affordable Art Fair
Archives of Feeling: Trauma, Knowledge, Empathy
Thor: Love and Thunder Costumes is taking place at ACMI throughout September.
First Peoples is taking place at the Bunjilaka Aboriginal Cultural Centre throughout September.
Paul Yore: Word Made Flesh is taking place at the Australian Centre for Contemporary Art from September 23.
Archives of Feeling: Trauma, Knowledge, Empathy is taking place at the RMIT Gallery from September 21.
This exhibition portrays three universal experiences through art. A plethora of artists will use their own experiences to create works that connect with those most-complicated of feelings. This show is happening as part of The Big Anxiety, a festival that aims to improve the mental health of Australians. Some of the artists involved include Peta Clancy, Naree Clare, Dominic Redfern and the T Collective, among many more.
In a globally contentious political climate, there are a wide variety of factors that create disruption. The Centre for Contemporary Photography will be home to an exhibition that focuses on the multitude of forms that disruption has occurred within our lives over the past two years. A selection of twelve Australian and international artists will be exhibiting their work, exploring the social, cultural and economic disruptors that weāve faced in recent times.
Paul Yore: Word Made Flesh
Jaedon Shin: Double Moon South Korean born, Melbourne-based Jaedon Shin is quickly becoming a popular artist within the local industry. His artwork creates a world of colour and shapes that are inspired by his multicul tural background, and his experience as an immigrant living in Australia. At times, his work becomes deeply personal, detailing feelings of isolation and alien ation ā youāre able to shape a knowledge of the artist solely based on his pieces.
The Affordable Art Fair makes its triumphant return to Melbourne this September. Thereāll be a collective of exceptional landscapes, sculptures, abstract pieces and lots more, exhibiting thanks to some of Australiaās greatest galleries. You can see art from popular names, alongside up and comers that are likely to become highly regarded. If youāre in the market for an affordable piece to decorate your home, this is the event for you.
Return to Nature is happening at the Monash Gallery of Art throughout September. Thor: Love and Thunder Costumes Recently, the Marvel Universe got a little bit bigger thanks to Thor: Love and Thunder. The movie was actually a predominately Australian production, filmed during lockdown. It employed some popular Aussie costume designers, who created memorable designs that added another element to the film. Their work will be shown at ACMI this Septembervisitors can see costumes worn by Chris Hemsworth, Natalie Portman, Christian Bale, and even Russell Croweās Zeus costume.
Return to Nature Weāve all been captivated by an enchant ing landscape; this exhibition celebrates some of the finest landscape paintings produced in Australia. It will shape a view of Australian landscapes over a long period, showing audiences how things have changed. Thereāll be over 60 artists involved, each bringing something different to the exhibition.
The Affordable Art Fair happening at the Melbourne Convention and Exhibition Centre from September 1 until September 4.
First Peoples Indigenous people aged from eight to 72 will be sharing their stories and jour neys in a new exhibition, which will also feature discussions of Australiaās vast indigenous languages, and the 38 distinct languages that are spoken in Victoria alone. There will also be over 600 pieces of artwork shown, made by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The exhibition has been curated by the Tulendj group of Elders, ensuring honour is paid to all people involved.
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The Alter State program of dance, film, circus, workshops and experiential events is underpinned by hope and potential, exploring and adopting new ways forward where deaf and disabled people are included in the planning and implementation of performance and the arts. Thereās no denying that the arts scene, like many others, is broadly non-inclusive for deaf and disabled performers and audiences, where participation and access to creative expression are limited by the way the industry and society itself function. Alter Stateās success will show the way towards a more inclusive industry, foster disability pride and create broader awareness of the āsocial modelā of understanding disability and how barriers can be dismantled.
āWeāre starting a strong conversation that needs to be had,ā Rodney says. āBasically, if weāre not at the table, we must be on the menu. Itās about those people being at the table now, leading the conversation because we know whatās right for ourselves. But also weāre multi-skilled, and weāre not all the same kind of disabled. We [the festival organisers] work like one with the disabled community ā and itās such a diverse community, with ethnicities and so many different bodies, cultures and religions. Itās one of the most diverse communities. So how do we have a collective consciousness?ā
ALTER Very few arts festivals set out to change the entire industry, but Alter State (12 September - 9 October) offers a radically different, inclusive and powerful potential for the future of arts.
STATE
Its uniqueness is encapsulated in a simple statement by Rodney Bell, one of the Foundation Artists behind the festival: āFor disabled, by disabledā.Ā A disability-led arts experience, with inclusivity and pride at its heart. An internationally acclaimed performer, Rodney is from Aotearoa and descends from Tainui Waka and of the Ngaati Maniapoto Iwi (tribe). He acquired his disability 30 years ago and has been a professional dancer for 27 years. Disabled artists, including Rodney, are leading the devel opment and delivery of Alter State with Arts Centre Melbourne and Arts Access Victoria, foregrounding the lived experiences and creativity of deaf and disabled people, and ensuring these diverse voices can lead meaningful discussions about acces sibility and inclusivity. Drawing on creativity from Australia and Aotearoa, Alter State honours First Nations cultures and makes space for kÅrero and storytelling shaped by disability.
Words by Kosa Monteith
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āIt takes time to make these kinds of events accessible,ā Rodney says. āBut if you want to include us in your community and have the advantage of accessing our community and looking at life in a whole new different light, youāll be patient.ā Alter State facilitates connection, collaboration and coming together, creating an opportunity for what Rodney calls ādeep āEssentially,listening.āIbe you and you be me. Deep listening and reciprocity,ā he says. āIām also looking forward to the bigger conversations that occur around [the festival], in the panels and so forth. Performers have the chance to talk about their experience in the arts and what access means to them, and how we can improve access and work in a collaborative way.ā
āMere is carved from greenstone and tear-shaped, itās a Maori weapon, and when itās made from wood itāsĀ meremere. I was carving it when I returned home to Aotearoa in 2015, wondering what journey it was going on and I watched all the shavings falling off this beautiful piece of wood and I was trying to make it beautiful but it already was. It reminded me of the sacrifice I had gone through in my life to dance. And I shared that story with Movement of the Human.ā The live score composed by Eden Mullholland will be played at Alter State by his brother, Jolyon (āThey have a real strong sense of each otherās style.ā) Rodney has performedĀ MeremereĀ since 2016, in front of thousands of audiences, but the work has evolved over time. āBecause itās all autobiographical, as I change or get new accolades itās added to the work,ā he says. āThen I have pockets of surprise, where other dancers join me and those change for different performances. And itās more than a solo work, because thereās design, audiovisual and live music.ā Collaboration and connection are at the heart of Alter Stateās performances. The program also includesĀ When The World Turns, a sensory landscape created by Polyglot Theatre (AUS) and Oily Cart (UK) for children with complex disabilities (but open to all). Itās an experiential art space of sound, sight, touch and wonder, fostering a connection with others and a ānew, inclusive ecologyā. Naturally, the format of the festival and its delivery are fundamentally structured around accessibility and inclusivity for the audience as well, from having Relaxed Performances and Tactile Tours to offering a digital program.
The festival idea began at a development workshop in November 2019, involving Rodney, Carly Findlay OAM and Joshua Pether, who are the Alter State Foundation Artists. āWe sat down and collaborated as a collective consciousness,ā Rodney says, āand to find a disability-led way forward through creating the [festival]Theseprinciples.āFoundation Principles are Equity, Disability Identity and Pride, Disability Consciousness, Aesthetics of Access, Reduced Barriers, Accountability and Crip Time ā likely an unfamiliar term to many non-disabled people.
āYou see someone in a wheelchair and think, āthey need helpā or ātheyāre sickā. You just jump to that objectifying. Language is very important, so through these principles, weāre evolving and using a language to talk about people and their relationship to being disabled, rather than just as inspirational.ā
BEAT MAG āItās all part of moving forward and breaking out of that medical model of understanding disability,ā Rodney says. āYou see someone in a wheelchair and think, āthey need helpā or ātheyāre sickā. You just jump to that objectifying. Language is very important, so through these principles, weāre evolving and using a language to talk about people and their relationship to being disabled, rather than just as inspirational.ā Rodney is bringing his much-acclaimed workĀ MeremereĀ to the festival ā an autobiographical journey of dance, reconnection and homecoming, developed with Movement of the Human. While the autobiographical work covers years of his life, the impetus came in 2015.
Covid has led to an examination of the arts landscape ā and the challenges and vulnerability it faces. This is the time to look for new ways forward. As a festival operating in a Covid world, Alter State can potentially draw on this shared experience to help non-disabled audiences explore not only how time works for disabled people, but also spaces.
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ā[The idea of Crip Time] is working at our capacity,ā Rodney says. āIn the context of a disabled person, it means taking as long as it takes to get something done. We donāt have the same working hours in a day. Other people can maybe jump into the shower for five minutes. It takes me an hour and a half. So if Iāve got to be somewhere for 8, Iām going to get up at 5:30. Then we get there, and find weāve got limited access into the building. I donāt call it a āchallengeā, but itās an ongoing presence. So this is a chance to ask, what does that mean for arts practice also?ā
For Rodney, Alter State is an opportunity for audiences to encounter genuinely unique and insightful art, setting standards for accessibility and participation in creativity and starting vital conversations, and heās excited to be part of it.
āBringing my work and myself to the festival, Arts Centre Melbourne putting the money in and opening their doors ā thatās an honour in itself,ā Rodney said.
āTo audiences I say, bring your lived experience and open hearts, and maybe in your silence, youāll shift how you see our disabled artists. But also come with gratitude, because gratitude is the attitude.ā
āDigital was always going to be a component of the festival, but Covid has highlighted how convenient this is for allowing people to access the art,ā Rodney says. āAccess is a huge thing, and Arts Centre Melbourne and Arts Access Victoria are really strong in this. Itās making the venues and website accessible, having Braille and Auslan and audio descriptions, making sure these are all in place.ā Rodney points to āuniversal accessā, an approach to making spaces accessible to all persons in a community, including people with disabilities or temporary injuries and the elderly ā and how it benefits everyone.
āWeāre pretending that things are going back to normal, but weāre still dealing with this ongoing [Covid] risk,ā Rodney says. āAnd I hope itās provided some empathy, because it highlighted access in a huge way and what access means as a disabled person. We spend a lot of time at home, because things arenāt accessible. Some disabled people never get out of their home. So it wasnāt an uncommon space for us ā for other people, it was just this Covid-space. It developed a kind of equity, where everyone had to be home, and we all shared that anxiety and so forth.ā
Rodney Bell will perform Meremere at Arts Centre Melbourneās Fairfax Studio as part of Alter State on September 29, 30, and October 1.
Melbourne Belly Dance Festival
The festival will be live across Melbourne venues, and beamed into many more, with the lineup of actors, authors and academ ics sharing their knowledge. Some of the writers involved include Jenny Slate, Brian Cox, and Anita Hill.
The Asian Fun Festival attempts to capture the contrast between tradi tional and contemporary Asian cultures, through food and a diverse range of performances. Events include cosplay, K-Pop, drum performances and more.
Events to experience this September
The Sriracha Festival is taking place at The Timber Yard from Saturday September 3 until Sunday September 4.
Words by Ben Lamb
Listen Out International festivals have well and truly made their return to Australia, with Listen Out happening this September. Thereās some great internationals and locals involved, to name a few, the lineup features internationals like AJ Tracey, Trippie Redd and Tove Lo, on top of a stacked local lineup with legends like Stace Cadet and The Jungle Giants.
The Melbourne Belly Dance Festival is taking place across Brunswick from Friday September 9 until Sunday September 11.
A massive festival making its way to Melbourneās shores this month, the Melbourne Writers Festival will feature illuminating minds from across the world.
Listen Out is happening at Catani Gardens on September Transmission23. Festival If youāre an electronic fan, this is the festival for you. The world of electronica is mixed with special effects, great equipment, and much more. Thereāll also be some mind-boggling audio-visual shows that will likely be the highlight of the night. Some of the great acts involved include Marlo, Rank 1, Vini Vinci, and plenty more. Transmission Festival is happening at the Flemington Racecourse on September 17.
Australian Tap Dance Festival
The Melbourne Writers Festival will be happening across Melbourne from September 8 until September 11.
Hawker Festival
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The Asian Fun festival is taking place at the Meat Market from September 10 until September 11. Tequila and Mezcal Festival
As the weather starts to warm up, the time for great tequila is here. Thereāll be presenters on show, sharing their exten sive knowledge of the world of tequila and mezcal. With tastings taking place in a decommissioned tram, itās an experience that doesnāt come along too often. If youāre a tequila expert, be prepared to be blown away with the rare finds that will be available.
Asian Fun Festival
If youāve ever been to Singapore, Malaysia or Thailand, youāll be well-versed in the world of Hawker food. Now you can get an authentic taste of the dining experi ence at home, with the Malaysian Hawker Festival. Queen Vic Market will be trans formed into a Hawker centre, complete with hawker food, entertainment, lanterns, mooncakes, and lots more.
The Malaysian Hawker Festival will be taking place from Saturday September 10 until Sunday September 11 at the Queen Vic Market.
The Australian Tap Dance Festival brings all the elements of the style into a weeklong celebration. Talented professional dancers from Australia and New Zealand will be in attendance, sharing their exper tise with adoring Aussie crowds, leading talks, classes, among much more.
The Tequila and Mezcal Festival will be happening at Retropolis on Sunday September Malaysian17.
GUIDEFESTIVAL
The Australian Tap Dance Festival will be taking place in Melbourne from Tesselaar Tulip Festival If youāve ever wanted to see a million tulips, youāre in luck thanks to the Tesselaar Tulip Festival. On top of flow ers, attendees will be able to enjoy live entertainment, quality food, and much more. Itās taking place in Silvan, just past the Dandenong Ranges, perfect for a scenic drive.
Melbourne Writers Festival
The Tesselaar Tulip Festival is happening in Silvan from September 10.
Yet another dance festival is making its way to Melbourne this month, this time celebrating all things belly dancing.Ā Teachers and students from Melbourne and wider Australia will be in attendance showing why theyāre experts in the field. Opening night will take place on Friday September 9, and will include food and drinks.
Sriracha FestivalĀ No, this isnāt a festival celebrating everyoneās favourite hot sauce, rather a one-day energetic music festival thatās said to be full of tasty beats, great food and good people. Thereāll be music from Mike Akox, Project Peters, and some good food courtesy of The Real Jerk Food Truck.







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Words by Tammy Walters
It was on a Tuesday that Sydney indie rockers, The Preatures, called it quits. On 25 May 2021, to be exact, a note posted to their Instagram feed read...
Credit Maclay Heriot
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MANFREDIISABELLA 10 years, The Preatures have disbanded. We want to thank everybody who was part of the journey and especially you for being such a dedicated fan base. Izzi will continue to release her own music.ā
āAfter

BEAT MAG Naturally, fans were devastated that the āIs This How You Feel?ā giants were no longer. For lead vocalist and keyboardist, Isabella āIzziā Manfredi, it was her euphoric emancipation. Behind the scenes of the bright bubbly exterior animated by anthems āSomebodyās Talkingā and āYanadaā, The Preatures story was clouded by financial stressors stemming from antiquated record deals, a decade-long romantic relationship breakdown, and dynamic misalignment. Stepping away from the music family, forged at the Australian Institute of Music, to āgo soloā was not the intention for Manfredi but would be the outcome.
āThe funny thing was when I released the first couple of singles, people were like āit sounds like The Preaturesā and I was like āyeah no shit ā I wrote the songsā. People didnāt think I was an agent of my own creative destiny which is so typical. Iām really excited for people to just see that side of me without the illusion that people around me make me who I am.āWith Emmaās advice in mind, Manfredi recruited a pool of talent to bringĀ izzi Ā to life. Along with Emma Louise,Ā izziĀ credits Lucy Taylor as a co write and flautist for āLiving In The Windā, Chris Collins as a producer, Stella Mozgawa on drums, Mikey di Francesco (Touch Sensitive) on bass, Kirin J Callinan on guitar, and PRICIE with a verse contribution on āNaiveā.
āIn the band I had to experience having to fight and pitch ideas and getting shut down a lot, which sometimes, artisti cally and creatively can be a good thing, and it is what made the Preatures, the Preatures. But personally I donāt see a huge difference between the songwriting I did in the band and the songwriting Iāve done on my own, essentially. Itās still me.ā
I experienced in that situation made me real ise for me going solo, one, itās just a music industry trope, that āgoing soloā, so there are all kinds of expectations and cliches and stereotypes when it doesnāt work ā case in point Freddy Mercury when he went solo was a disaster ā and there are all those tropes about the lead singer ā āyou give them a mile and they want to indulge themselvesā and āitās the members of the band that keep them in checkā.ā
āThat was a goal of mine overall, I wanted it to feel more pop than Preatures,ā she says.
The nickname titled final product is Isabella Manfredi as her true authentic self; The Preatures but a bit more pop, passionfilled but imperfect, without pitching and without parameters.
Isabella Manfrediās team was further expanded by Jonathan Wilson (Father John Misty, Angel Olsen), Jeffertitti Moon, Drew Erickson, and full-circle collabora tion with The Preaturesā debut EP,Ā Shaking Hands ,Ā producer, Tony Buchen.āIād always written with the band so it wasnāt like I wasnāt used to a lot of collabo rators, but what was different about it was that the people in the room with me were in service to what I wanted,ā she explains.
āI like a bit of character in my recordings so I have a differ ent metric of success for this album and these songs. Iām always going for the feeling, I just want things to feel good! Youāll notice that in this album. There are artifacts in this record.ā
āI think because Iām not a super-pro musician ā Iām a good musician but I still have the mind of a beginner, an amateur ā that even though Iāve absorbed a lot of things productions-wise and technically from being surrounded by that in the band, I also donāt mind if things are a bit scrappy, a bit imperfect.
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She explains, āThere was a point where I presented a Preatures record and a solo record and there was a point where there was a lot of scrutiny on my solo stuff to make sure it was differentiated from Preatures stuff enough as far as if I were releasing them both ā which I had originally intended. I wanted to stay in the band and write music as The Preatures but I also want to do my own thing because I feel like I have more to say and more to give. That didnāt end up happening.ā Manfrediās decision to venture outside of the band was met by confusion and blame for the bandās premature industry departure, with a cliched egomaniac stigma attached to the experience.āThescrutiny
āI think naturally Iām a much more prolific artist. I donāt care about perfection. Things have to be good enough and my level of good enough is probably, maybe, six in-between.
āI definitely wrestled with a lot of those beliefs myself, and insecurities, I think. I was very conscious of not doing that when I went solo. For me it was only about being about to actually move. I felt like I couldnāt move in the band. We just felt stuck in one place. Two records in ten years was like torture for me. Two records! Ten years! Iād like to do a bit more than that!ā
On Friday 2 September, Manfredi will be one album into her solo catalogue with the release of her debut record,Ā izzi.Ā Following a 45-show-long run of Preatures shows across regional Victoria, Manfredi has a āfuck, Iāve gotta get out of here. I have to get off the islandā moment. She headed on a writing trip at the end of 2018 where the genesis ofĀ izziĀ began through experimentation.Ā āI had worked with a bunch of people like Anton Newcombe from Brian Jonestown Massacre and went and worked with a big pop guy in New York, just trying out a bunch of stuff to see where I might find myself.ā It was friend and collaborator, Emma Louise, who appears on tracks āSeasons Changeā āSleepwalkingā and āOnly Childā, who helped form her identity as a solo artist, one not dissimilar to that of her Preatures self. āWhen I ended up in L.A with Emma, she was the one who said to me āYou have a classic voice. Donāt lose that, donāt change it!ā and I loved that because I felt like she was giving me permission to just be me and that I was enough. Sometimes that is all you need!
Isabella Manfrediās izzi is out now via Island Records. Sheās playing Queenscliff Music Festival from November 25 - 27. āThe funny thing was when I released the first couple of singles, people were like āit sounds like The Preaturesā and I was like āyeah no shit ā I wrote the songsā. People didnāt think I was an agent of my own creative destiny which is so typical. Iām really excited for people to just see that side of me without the illusion that people around me make me who I am.ā

This show is taking place at The Palms at Crown. Itās happening on September 16.
Running Machine is hitting the Arts House courtesy of BLEED, the international art event taking over a number of popular art galleries across the globe. Running Machine brings the world of dance and technology together, this development coming to life in Fujiyoshida, Japan. One of the primary artists is Yuiko Masukawa, a Japanese choreographer based in Melbourne, who has been getting a great deal of attention lately for her exceptional work.
Words by Ben Lamb Do You Hear The People Sing? Lyricist Alain Boublil and composer Claude-Michel Schƶnberg have been behind some of the worldās biggest musicals, including Les MisĆ©rables, Miss Saigon and The Pirate Queen. Do You Hear The People Sing? will bring well known stars from Broadway and West End runs of their musicals to celebrate and perform their amazing work. They will be joined by a 24-piece orchestra.
Respect: The Aretha Franklin Story Aretha Franklin remains one of the worldās most iconic singers, and her music has been the soundtrack to many lives across the world. This upcoming musical is based on the vocalistās gripping life story, featuring Angie Narayan in the leading role. Itāll feature many of our favourite tracks of the singer, āSay a Little Prayerā, āRESPECTā, and āSon of A Preacher Manā to name a few.
This show is taking place at the Southbank Theatre. Itās happening from September 24.
Katrina Fleming and Caili Christian will launch their cabaret-inspired show, which features a bunch of jokes and some great stories about traversing this world as an older single woman. This show is taking place at The Butterfly Club. Itās happening from September 8 through to September 10
Queenagers A Queenager is the new term to describe older women who want to live their lives as teenagers, and not in the way elements of society wants older people to act. The Butterfly Club will be home to two Queenagers this September for a few nights with their self-titled show.
Wog Boys Forever World Premiere will be happening at the Palais Theatre. The Melbourne run lasts from September 22 until September 25.
Itās about a group of six people who live between the city and the country, featur ing a six-person cast that will turn the standard play format on its head, making the most of the La Mama theatre space. Traps will be an immersive experience too, but thereās no expectation for the audience to interact. This show is taking place at La Mama. It runs from September 7 until September 18.
Wog Boys Forever World Premiere
Do You Hear The People Sing? is taking place at the Arts Centreās Hamer Hall. It runs from September 27 until September 28.
This show is taking place at the Arts House in North Melbourne. It runs from September 14 until September 17.
Alongside Gay, the play will also star Holly Austin, Robin Goldsworthy, Tuulli Narkle, and many more.
GUIDESTAGE Shows to catch in September
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Cyrano Star of stage and screen Virginia Gay brings a gender-swapped version of the popular play to the Southbank Theatre stage. The original source material was written back in 1897 by Edmond Rostand, who based it on the life of Cyrano de Bergerac. Since then, it has had many musical treatments, opera versions, book varieties, and plenty more.
This show is taking place at Chapel off Chapel. It runs from September 8 until September 18.
Itās hitting Chapel off Chapel and will star Lyla DiGrazia and Stephanie Powell in leading roles.
The Wog Boys are back. Nick Giannopoulos and Vince Colosimo have returned to the big screen a decade after their last foray into the Wog Boy world. As is the style with their movies, itās set to feature a plethora of great cameos and guest stars.
Freaky Friday Based on the popular Disney movie of the same name, Freaky Friday is a new musical that has been garnering a great deal of attention. The book is penned by popular playwright Bridget Carpenter, and the music is written by Tom Kitt, who has been behind the book in musicals If/Then and SpongeBob SquarePants.
Traps Traps is a play thatāll make you think.
Thereās set to be a massive premiere event taking place in Melbourne this month, and itāll include a performance from Giannopoulos, plus a red carpet.
Running Machine





October/November 2023
National Theatre Drama School 1936 of Drama Dr Jo Loth
| Head
Acting Technique ā The Next Stage
8-week course. Wednesdays 7pm ā 9:30pm
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The National Theatre Drama School offers a range of short acting courses for adults (18+) looking to explore their performance potential. Our highly experienced industry professionals deliver courses over 8 weeks with 2 ā 2.5hr classes held each week. Book before Sunday 25 September and save 10% More information and bookings, visit:
Our industry professionals will prepare you to take to the stage with confidence and skills necessary to successfully perform and connect with your fellow actors.
The Changeling. Dir by Harry Haynes. Image by Cameron Grant. Honey. Dir by Katie Cawthorne. Image by Cameron Grant. The Changeling. Dir by Harry Haynes. Image by Cameron Grant. Dredge, Dir by Katie Cawthorne. Image by Cameron Grant. Showreel. Dir by Danielle Carter. Image by Danielle Carter.
Performance Making ā The Creative Stage Work with expert teachers to further develop your acting skills and create a self-devised work that you will perform for family and friends at the end of the course. 8-week course. Wednesdays 7pm ā 9pm Screenshots Take your acting skills from the stage to the screen in this dynamic course with screen actor Cazz Bainbridge. 8-week course. Thursdays 7pm ā 9pm
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8-week Wednesdayscourse.7:30pm ā 9:30pm or Saturdays 1pm ā 3pm
nationaltheatre.org.au/dramaActing
Take your first steps towards becoming an actor in a supportive, inspiring and creative environment.
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For one night, fall into the heart-warming richness of one musical that champions community above all else in the darkest of times. The musical phenomenaĀ Come From AwayĀ is returning to the Comedy Theatre in Melbourne next month and there has never been a better time to see this one-of-a-kind show. Taking inspiration from the most unlikely source, this Tony award-winning production, written by Irene Sankoff and David Hein and directed by Christopher Ashley, has garnered consistent standing ovations and praise from enamoured audiences. Cast member Joe Kosky, who plays the oddly named local cop Oz Fudge, opens up about the moving nature ofĀ Come From AwayĀ and the heart-warming connection the show founders in its cast, crew and audience. āItās often advertised as a 9/11 show, but for me itās really a story about the kindness of the events surrounding 9/11,ā Joe says. The show centres on āthis incredible community in Gander that rallied together and basically put the minds of 7000 passengers at ease.āAfter the initial attacks on the World Trade Centre, the skies over the United States of America had to be cleared pronto. But where would all of the planes already in the air be able to go? ā38 planes were grounded in this tiny town in Newfoundland,ā Joe says. āThe people there are one of the rare relics left of community and generosity. Having met some of the people, itās obvious to me that they operate in a way where theyāre always thinking about others over themselves and I think weāve lost that in many parts of the world. Thatās why this show is so heart-warming.āJoebelieves that the sentimental core ofĀ Come From AwayĀ is allowed to shine due to its simplicity. āPart of the beauty of this show is its humility: thatās what keeps people coming back. People donāt get drawn in by the fancy advertising. They get drawn in because a friend of theirs saw it and told them they have to come and see it for themselves.āTheshowitself is set in a time where the internet age was in its infancy ā sometimes the old school methods can be the best way to get people into a theatre. āWe find that word of mouth is the best advertising for this show,ā Joe says, ābecause once people witness this story it is infectious and they want to tell everyone they know about it.ā A strength for any show in this post-lockdown era where theatre attendance still has not risen back to the pre-pandemic age, this musical shows a dedication to the wonders of community, thus creating a community amongst those who go to see live theatre. āItās almost life imitating art,ā says Joe. āSomething like this is a reminder of the good in humanity. It is a super important thing to see in live performance in our day and age.ā ButĀ Come From AwayĀ isnāt all about profound commentary on 21st-century society, itās also just a great night out at the theatre. āThe humour is a significant part of the show,ā laughs Joe. āI actually think itās a really funny show. The way itās constructed takes you on this incredible emotional journey and it doesnāt force it on you. When weāre touching on the sadder moments surrounding 9/11, it moves along at such a pace that almost reflects the mentality of the locals in Gander. They acknowledge the sadness of the situation, but then say āletās get on with it!ā.
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Come From AwayĀ is playing at Comedy Theatre in its final Melbourne season from September 1.
āIt gives you the exact impression of what itās like to be in their community at that time. Theyāre not in any way downplaying the tragedies, but itās that incredible resilience and will to persevere that they embody. Thatās what I love when people come and see the show, people who didnāt know what to expect, they just get taken on this hour and 45 rollercoaster that hits them everywhere from joy and laughter to tragedy and sadness right back to love and generosity.āTheatre always has a great capacity to alter the opinions of those watching. As Joe states, āthereās something really important about good art that helps change peopleās minds or at least help plant a seed for the future,ā and he can guarantee that that experience will be had when you go to seeĀ Come From Away. āYou leave slightly changed. That sounds really cliched, but you do, and I think any good art can do that to you.ā
In a world of isolation, enforced distance and social media, sometimes a return to a sense of community is the right kind of therapy.
Words by James Robertson Credit Jeff Busby

With her latest record Life in Colour confronting complex social issues such as white supremacy, displacement and global perceptions of Blackness, her persona on stage is as bold and as powerful as the music that she makes.
Sonically, TAMS/Nās music traverses alternative, retro, dream and cinematic pop spaces as she moves from playful, gleaming and anthemic to raw, vulnerable and haunting. Since the release of the single āSo Sadā in 2019, TAMS/N has released her 2020 EP Sin and a string of catchy and unique singles, includ ing āFallen Angelā (2020), āYou, Iām Alrightā (2021), āAudacityā (2021), āLove Me Alwaysā (2022) and her new single āLonelyā.
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Somewhere along the way Iād lost my voice, when I realised it was always there, just in my songs. āI only ever wrote songs just for myself in my bedroom and they were never for anyone, and then I just chose to start doing it live and singing them at little cabaret places that I found āpeople really liked them and I felt like they were really genuine with theirāMusicresponse.helpsme change my narrative, especially because itās my art, my songwriting and my words. It just feels really authentic to me. It makes me feel very powerful.ā
Catch THNDO on October 6 and Graace on October 8 at Chapel Off Chapel at 12 Little Chapel Street, Prahran. This article was made in partnership with Chapel Off Chapel.
These stripped-back and uniquely intimate events are presented as a part of On The Road Again - a Victorian government initiative that aims to bring live music back across the state.
Having joined the likes of Flight Facilities on their Return Flight tour of Australia and the United States, sheās no stranger to the Australian live performance scene. In the same year as her tour with the electronic music legends, she released her debut single āKissing Boysā, followed up a few months later by āLast Nightā. With her latest EP Self Preservation characterising some of her boldest work to date, sheās set to perform an incredible show at Chapel Off Chapel.
TAMS/N OTWAY
The line ādonāt you call me when youāre lonelyā in āLonelyā refers to leaving a toxic situation and not allowing it to return, which she believes can be attributed to various scenarios. Bold and fearless, TAMS/N sings tales of struggle, heartbreak and toxicity with honesty, charisma and empowerment. āThe world can be difficult and life can be really hard, so weāre all just trying to find ways to connect and musicās such a great way to do that. Getting feedback from people who have listened to my music is probably one of the greatest things Iāve ever experienced. If I connect with one person, it really means the world to me.ā
āLonelyā is out now. This article was made in partnership with TAMS/N OTWAY.
With its stained glass windows and chapel facade, the unique and iconic Chapel Off Chapel is hosting a series of intimate and stripped-back gigs this October. These Chapel Sessions present an array of exciting and diverse artists, with a lineup of killer gigs that includes acclaimed soul and R&B singer THNDO performing on October 6, and fast-rising indie singer-songwriter Graace on October 8. A powerhouse of soul and R&B, THNDO will bring her signature powerful lyricism, rich vocals and smooth backing instrumentation to the stage at Chapel Off Chapel on October 6. Wowing audiences at numerous festival appearances across Bluesfest, WOMADelaide, Adelaide Cabaret Festival and Groovin the Moo, the jazz and soul singer is known for her spellbinding stage persona as well as her powerful jazz and soul vocals.
Credit Marcus Coblyn
Words by Sidonie Bird de la Coeur
Words by Christine Lan Melbourne indie/alt-pop singer-songwriter TAMS/N OTWAY is creating her own narrative.
Itās an impassioned and liberating narrative that flows through the creative outlets that helped her in the darkest of times. Those times when lifeās most challenging experiences lead to the most significant revelations and self-discoveries. āI had a mental breakdown,ā says TAMS/N. āI didnāt know who I was ā Iād been in a couple of really terrible situations and abusive relationships, which just led to a lot of self-worth issues.
One of Australiaās fastest-rising indie pop artists Graace is appearing for an impassioned show on October 8. Sheās known for bringing her vulnerable and passionate vocals to Hayden Jamesā beloved single āNumbā, which she co-wrote. With the single reaching certified-platinum status in Australia, the indie singer-songwriter from Sydney burst onto the Australian music scene and hasnāt looked back since.


Italo-Disco ā as both a music and visual cultural genre ā has even inspired some of Melbourneās most effervescent acts, working at the intersection of performance art and music. It seems to come down to one word: escapism. Performance artist DJĀ TanzerāsĀ latest albumĀ Disco AutomaticĀ draws on the genreās inimitable sounds and production qualities, which are visually referenced in the scintillating costumes, styling, and dazzling effects of her recent music videos, transporting the viewer to a surreal, alternate reality of sequins and synthesisers. Performance art duoĀ The HuxleysĀ (who also star in several of Tanzerās music videos, includ ingĀ āDestination Loveā) also reference Italo-Disco as an ongoing source of cultural and stylistic inspiration for their escapist wizardry.
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If youāve never heard of Pino DāAngio āĀ Okay OkayĀ ā no problemo. You only have to hear his songs once during a night out, and theyāll probably be stuck in your head for a lifetime. Luca Muscato, one of the creative directors of multicultural greatgroundcanātfromlong-standingthatcommunity,Ā DiscoMediterranea,musicsaysMelbourneāsculturaldiversityandfascinationwithrecordsallovertheworldexplainswhyfolksgetenoughofItalo-Disco.Ā āWehavefoundveryfertileinMelbourne,andweāveseennumbersatourevents,āsaysMuscato.Ā āWhenwefilluptheroomwithacrowdwhoareallontheirfeetdancing,wearerecreatingapartyatmospherethathasbeengoingonforgenerationsinourfamilies.Theessenceofwhatwedoisverysimple:providecatchybeatsthatmakepeoplefeelliketheyarepartofsomethingbigger,somethingthatunitesusall.āIftheturnoutatDiscoMediterraneaāsrecenteventsisanythingtogoby,thesesoundsarespeakingtopeoplefromallwalksoflifeinMelbourne.ThegrouphasscoredresidenciesatWhitehartBar,Section8andRunnerUpRooftop(CollingwoodYards),aswellascollaborationswithguestDJsincludingĀ DJNETTĀ andĀ MikeGurrieri.GeorgeHysteric,DJandfounderofMothballRecords,isanotherMelbourne-basedItalo-Discoguruwhohasobservedtherecentpopularityofthemusicgenreacrossthecity.WhileHysterichasbeenmixingtracksfromthegenreforyearsinhissets,hesaysanewandculturallyintuitivegenerationoffansinMelbournewanttohearmore,packingoutthedancefloorwellbeforemidnight.Inaddition,MelbournehospitalityinstitutionslikeItalianwinebarĀ JoanieāsBarettoĀ inThornburycontinuetorunItalo-Disco-themedeveningsbypopulardemand,includingtheirrecentsell-outevent
As Melburnians continue to discover, Italo-Disco has a remarkable ability to loosen up the neck and shoul ders, to make a bad day evaporate, and even, to help you cryptically profess your love for someone in a foreign language on the dancefloor (grazie, Google Translate). Weāre talking about the kind of music that makes the spirit fly free, especially after a negroni or three. As Ornella Vanoni sings in her 80s hitĀ āTi Voglioā: Tu mi fai volareĀ /Ā Quando sto da teĀ /Ā So anchāio volare⦠Follow @discomediterranea on Instagram for the latest Italo-Disco events happening in Melbourne.
ITALO DISCO Breezy rhythms, addictive beats, cheesy vocalsā¦and a damn good Wordstime.byAlexia Petsinis
I talo-Disco ā a broad genre fusing boogie, disco and jazz-funk sounds that defined Italian popular music in the 70s and 80s ā is experiencing some thing of a renaissance in Melbourne, of all places.Inthe hands of a few creative masterminds who are putting their own fresh spin on the genre, these feel-good tunes are uniting crowds from all cultures across some of the cityās most-visited bars and nightspots. The best part? You donāt even need to be Italian to become completely intoxicated by the audible zest of these tunes.
Discoteca Grande, which people are still talking about around town.Ā āWhen I first got into Italo-Disco music about 20 years ago, people I knew in Melbourne were quite dismissive of the genre,ā Hysteric says. āThey wrote it off as cheesy, as the kinds of sounds people shouldnāt be proud of. But now, these same songs get an entire room on their feet, particularly Funk-Italo tunes that have a familiar beat people can groove alongAsto.āMuscato adds, the genre has a highly immersive quality, striking a chord in peopleās imagination. Its distinct characteristics include lush, cinematic sounds that transport people to the Mediterranean coastline, a sultry pala zzo party after dark, or a slow afternoon under a Sicilian lemon tree:Ā āDreamy sax and lazy guitars set the tone for a care free mood. Of course, disco is at the core of this genre, and the origin of disco music is founded on freedom, inclusion, and happiness. Itās feel-good music,ā he says.

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CLAMM Melbourne punk-rock trio CLAMM have just dropped their highly anticipated sophomore album Care.
āWhen I was a kid my mum was really into heavy rock music and metal, and in my late teens, I started listening to her CDs like Jack White and Soundgarden. Miles and I had known each other since we were kids. When we were in primary school for a project, we made a song about saving the squirrel monkeys. Milesās dad is a musician, so we made it in his recording studio⦠so technically we have been recording music together since we were seven or eight. āMilesā brother started a band and weād sneak into their gigs. When we saw this thriving live music scene, we kind of went āwowā¦maybe we could do this.āā
Shortly afterĀ Beseech MeĀ was released, Everett came into the picture. CLAMMās previous bass player Luke Scott had left the group to go to school in Poland, and when Summers and Harding saw Everettās other band, theĀ Belair Lip Bombs, playing a local gig the trio got chatting. Before long Everett was crucial to CLAMMās noise-rock sound. āWith Maisie in the group, it just felt right,ā Summers adds. āShe learnt our songs so quickly and now she has played so many gigs with us. Sheās an incredible musician and in this album, itās been awesome to have her be a part of it and to get her voice.
Care is out now via Chapter Music. Catch them at the Corner Hotel on Saturday, October 15 and at Meredith Music Festival from December 9 - 11.
āThe hardest thing has been the Covid situation. It upset the rhythm of how things might have progressed otherwise,ā Summers continues. āOur recording sessions were drawn out and our UK/EU tour was pushed back. Staying positive and persistent was hard.ā After the release of Care, the trio finally embarked on their EU/UK tour - their international debut - playing 12 gigs across the UK, the Netherlands, Denmark, Germany, France and Belgium.
Summers and Harding started CLAMM in 2019, but it could be said the foundations for the band were being laid years earlier, growing up in Melbourneās southeast suburbs.
Now, frontman and guitarist Jack Summers, drummer Miles Harding and bassist Maisie Everett return bigger, louder and stronger than ever. With a bigger production team than CLAMM has ever seen before,Ā CareĀ has an elevated edge. The 15-track LP delivers feedback-laden fiery riffs, driving basslines and a gritty relent lessness that underscores themes of discontent, antagonism and confusion.ā CareĀ is a mix of a commentary on systems of power and politics and what itās like to experience those things on a personal level. Itās about younger people who donāt necessarily fit into the mould of society and are not content with working standard jobs for their entire lives. I think a lot of people kind of share those sentiments,ā Summers says. āThis albumās a bigger production. We have Anna Gordon playing sax on some of the songs. She came in for a session and belted some stuff out that really added to our music. We also ask Nao Anzai, who has recorded both of our albums, to add some noise on the synths which was awesomeā.
Armed with newfound confidence, CLAMM got to work on their second album. However, like countless other underground acts, the effects of the Covid pandemic hit hard.
āSeeing our debut do so well has been wild. Hearing it being played on the radio so much is all we could ever have hoped for. It was so huge for us and we seriously didnāt expect it.
Words by Coco Veldkamp
āThen my mum bought me a guitar when I was 15 or 16 ā a Fender Stratocaster. Itās a crap one but I love it and I havenāt been able to swap it out for anything sinceā.
Credit Gen Kay
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The success of their debut came as a surprise to CLAMM, withĀ Beseech Me a Triple R and FBI Radio feature album, winning 2021 awards from Spin, Bandcamp, Daily and KEXP. Summers says it wasnāt what they were expecting.
āI am losing my mind I am so nervous and so excited,ā Summers says. āItās a clichĆ© I know but I couldnāt have dreamed of this happening⦠itās crazy. Iām nervous just thinking about it, to beāJusthonest.before Covid we were talking about a European tour and now itās finally happening. It kind of feels like we have just pressed the play button again after two yearsā.
The bandās debut albumĀ Beseech MeĀ saw them gain a dedicated fanbase in the underground community and sign with UK record label Meat Machine (in Australia / USA, theyāre withĀ Chapter).
āWhen people resonated withĀ Beseech MeĀ and we reflected on the songs and the lyrics and what we were doing it was kind of like āoh shit ā people responded to it.āā

GRAACE8OCT6THNDOOCT Presented by THE EDINBURGHCASTLE HOTEL 681 SYDNEY ROAD, BRUNSWICK TUE 6 SEP RAMSAYDUO THU 8 SEP WADDINGHAMDANIEL FRI 9 SEP LANEOUS MON 12 SEP RICHARDSTIM THU 15 SEP ROMANXAVIER SAT 17 SEP PARSONSPHOEBE TUE 20 SEP FRIDAYGIRL THU 22 SEP SANDRIINA FRI 23 SEP TRIGGEMATTTRIO SUN 25 SEP CRUWYS TUE 27 SEP LEYDENANNA THU 29 SEP DYLANOBSERVABLEKNURāSUNIVERSE FRI 30 SEP THEDWELLERSFRINGE MRS SMITHāS TRIVIA ā WED AT 8






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The Americans ; and the descending vocal lines
Beware: this songās joyous, wordless, ādoo-doo-doo, doo, doo, dooā chorus will become permanently lodged in your internal jukebox after just one listen. Built from a MÄori folk strum, āMy Boyā sounds like sun glitter and blissful abandon.
Williams has admitted he loves to āblindside people with upsetting mood shiftsā during live performances and hoped to recreate some of this unpre dictability on My Boy ā success! Itās impossible to anticipate his next move, which is riveting from a fanās perspective. But one thingās for certain, Williams never disappoints.
interpretative ability.
āStanding with my dick in my hand/ Iām let down/ Now Iām just aloneā ā āGoodbye Earle Streetā, during which glockenspiel masterfully echoes the grand piano melody, navigates confusion and heartbreak.BigScary somehow capture the beauty, fragility and sorrow of humanity through their songwriting. An all-encom passing, sometimes-tearful listening experience. Headphones recommended.
Label: Virgin Music Australia Release date: 9 September
Marlon Williams Reviews by Bryget Chrisfield
Perfect in its simplicity and catchy AF, itās our biggest song crush of the year to date ā weāre officially obsessed! The world seems more vibrant with each repeatProducedspin.
MÄori phrases are peppered throughout a couple of My Boyās songs, including latest single āEasy Does Itā ā resplendent with Delaney Davidsonās lap steel ā which opens thusly: āNgĆ£ mihi to your friends when they stop calling.ā In danceable standout track āDonāt Go Backā (āā¦to the party everybody thinks they know youā) ā which could be a companion piece for āParty Boyā from his previous Make Way For Love set ā Williams references the cry of New Zealandās native owl, the ruru (āTÄrÄ te tangi a te āMorningruru!ā).Crystalsā is a hoot, with its āHey! Hey!ā gang vocals evoking Edward Sharpe & The Magnetic Zeros. Then Williams is suddenly possessed by the spirit of Elvis (āSomebody help meā) during this songās quirky bridge. Elsewhere: āRiver RivalāĀ addresses the political divisiveness of vaccines; the ColdwaschannelsduringāThinkingā80s-referencingOfNinaā,whichWilliamsBryanFerry,inspiredbytheWardrama
My Boyās title track ā Marlon Williamsā first new solo music since the release of hisĀ breakup album Make Way For Love (2018) ā should come with a warning.
WilliamsāvehicleniesGees-esquestatelycover,BarbraBarrycloserfallenāTripsāpenultimatethroughouttrackarecrestbeyondbelief.Show-stoppingāPromisesāāaGibb-pennedStreisandresplendentwithpianoandBeeharmoāistheperfectforshowcasingastonishing
MY BOY Album
Tom Iansek and Jo Syme pressed pause on Big Scary to focus on other musi cal/record label projects for a while. Reconvening in 2019, they pondered, āWhat is Big Scary?ā And Iansek proposed, āIt is the music made by me and you.ā Me And You, their fifth LP, sees Big Scary bringing intimate recollections to life, sometimes charting the course of a burgeoning relationship ā from heady infatuation to disillusionment then commitment ā within a single song (āDevotionā).Theintoxicating waltz rhythm of opener āF.A.ā evokes Kate Bushās āArmy Dreamersā. āIām melting away as you rush through your morning/ Forget our sweet nothings/ Alone in your kitchen/ Denying me is your daily ritual/ Coffee and crumbs and a coating of lipstick...ā ā delivered in delicious, cooing unison by Iansek and Syme, enthralling lyrics give voice to innermost thoughts. The melancholy, piano-led āIn My Viewā channels Coldplayās āTroubleā: āMust be hard for you/ Living in my view.ā For āReal Loveā, instrumentation swells to incorpo rate a choir, strings and horns before a whistling refrain completes the hopeful picture: āThis could feel like real love.ā
Label: ReleasePieater/Inertiadate:23September
Big Scary Me And You
by Tiny Ruins guitarist Tom Healy at Neil Finnās Roundhead Studios in Auckland, My Boy also features Finnās son, and Crowded House bandmate, Elroy on drums and percussion. The only member of Williamsā long-time backing band, The Yarra Benders, to grace Boyās liner notes is Dave Kahn and the excitement of the new filters through his third solo record. Once Covid the fun sponge basically pressed pause on life, Williams found himself back home in NewĀ Zealand recon necting with friends, family and his roots.


Iām gonna die with this frown on my face
Label: ReleaseIndependentĀ date:2September
āAn Afro Futureā (āseeing peopleĀ who lookĀ like me on stageā).Then she assembled a history-mak ing, 15-piece all-Zambian backing band for touring purposes ā bringing her vision to life and empowering others. āYou will remember the name/ Sampa The Great is the greatestā āāNever Forgetā
Label: Cheersquad Records Release date: 2 September
The Baudelaires TiLT Layered, fuzz-drenched guitars, distor tion aplenty, powerful-but-measured drumming and distant vocals, which act more like an additional instrument than deliverer of messages ā The Baudelaires are psychedelic, man! And we can certainly imagine tripped-out punters at their gigs, in the zone and quite possibly decoding secret communication while immersed in these hypnotic, sprawling arrangements.TheBaudelairesā āRoller Vaselineā was born from an attempt at writing a song in the style of their former tourmates, Italyās New Candys ā band bromance alert! But the Melbourne-based quartetās latest single soon morphed into an entirely different beast, according to The Baudelaires frontman Grischa Zahren-Bergner, especially theāHawai ian-esque bridgeā inspired by New Candys lead vocalist Fernando Nuti ānailing his first ever surf at Bermagui beachā during their Australian tour. Built from a stop-starty riff that channels Silverchairās āFreakā, lead single āParasolā shimmies with tambourine accents. āIf I could keep it turning, ātil I feel nothingā ā The Baudelaires wrote this one about some post-show hijinks in Belgium, including that time they latched onto a gambling addict who was hogging a rouletteClosingtable.track āSolid Rockā struts along nonchalantly until an instrumental freakout invades around the three-min ute mark. The song then exponentially quickens in pace ā the lunatics taking over the asylum ā thereās a brief pause, then The Baudelaires lock back into their original groove (show-offs!) to close.
As Above, So Below
Sampa The Great
Label: Lorna Vista RecordingsĀ Release date: 9 SeptemberĀ Ruby Gill
As Above, So Below is the truest expres sion of her art to date, according to Sampa Tembo (aka The Great). Co-produced by Sampa alongside Zambian producer Mag44 ā whose music she admired as a child ā the album was recorded in Zambia during the āWhopandemic.didmusic/ Made that shit language/ African branded/ We did (never forget)ā¦ā ā āNever Forgetā (feat. Chef 187, Sampaās cousin Tio Nason and lilā sis MwanjĆ©) pays tribute to Zamrock, a genre with ā70s origins that combined traditional African music with psyche delic rock, and showcases Sampaās gruff timbre and trademark percussive flow to perfection. Inventive rhyming elevates āLaneā (feat. Denzel Curry) ā āThinkinā youāre Geppetto/ Pullinā strings, you aināt get the memo/ You know that Iām walkinā through the meadowā¦ā ā a song about giving yourself permission to show your full range as a human being. After clocking Sampaās NPR Tiny Desk Concert, AngĆ©lique Kidjo reached out to request a collab: Sampa features on Kidjoās āFree & Equalā and now the fivetime Grammy Award-winning Beninese trailblazer returns the feat. favour on this albumās ebullient, brass-infused closer, āLet Me Be SampaGreatā.envisioned
You canāt help but smile while looking at the adorbs photo of baby Ruby that graces the cover of her debut album, perfectly illustrating its āpublicāgovernmentāsāBorderlinesācanātAndmyRadioheadāsintensifyingbackāanPleaseconflict:stratetrackās[her]MarybasedJohannesburg-born,title.Melbourne-songwriterRubyGillhassaidthatOliverandLeonardCohenātaughtaboutwordsāandtheopeningtitleopeninglinesimmediatelydemonherknackforverbalisinginternalāIāvegotonerequest,itāssimple/donātletthepeoplein/Iamnursingintoleranceforsocialinteraction.āStrikingstandouttrackāAnchorāwithitssyncopateddrumbeats,feedsquall,forebodingguitarlinesandvocalharmoniesātunesintofrequency.āIjustwannaknow/WhenIcanhugmum/Mystepfatherisgettingold/someoneāsbullyinghisson/AndIhelpā¦āāouch,myheart!GillwroteāanodetotheAustralianābureaucraticnonsenseāwhilehereonatemporarybridgingvisa.Whethersheāssingingaboutpanicattacksā,arguingaboutdrivingdirections(āIntimewiththeengineturningoverā)orponderingāWhyareyoumakingmedinner?/WhyamIstillhere?āfollowingatriptoanex-boyfriendāshousetocollectherthings(āAllthebirdsundertheWestgateā),Gillāsdeliveryswitchesfromsweet-soundingtocrackingwithrawemotiononadime.Aclassicallytrainedpianistandself-confessedMissyHigginstragic,Gillāsvocaltoneanddevastatinglybeautiful,wistfulmelodiesaretestamenttoherfandom.
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Section 8
FAMOUS FOR the huge heated beer garden with a view, definitely one of the nicest watering holes in Northcote.
LIVE MUSIC every night of the week, thanks to some of Melbourneās most eclectic DJs and some choice underground acts from around the world. Better yet, entry is always free.
Itās a perfect title for the venue, which sums up the best of modern Melbourne in a neat little package down one of our popular laneways. Entirely outdoors (with appropriate covering for those afternoon showers), itās a mix of re-conditioned freight containers, wooden crates to sit on, DJs and tropical gardens around the periphery.
INFAMOUS FOR the occasional epic secret gig (Pixies come to mind) or surprise party (Lady Gagaās 4th of July bash) that take place at the old Social Club from time to time.
The Northcote Social Club has been a pillar of live music in the north since 2005. The original venue, previously known as The Commercial Hotel, dated all the way back to 1854, supposedly born as a rough and ready refuge for teamsters and bullock driv ers. That couldnāt be further from its modern iteration - sister venue to the iconic Corner Hotel, the bandroom hosts a diverse mix of genres, local talent as well as national and international touring artists of all genres. The venueās ethos is centred on inclusion and community, focusing on providing a safe place for people from all backgrounds to enjoy music and socialise in a comfortable environment. In September, theyāll be hosting ex-Alpine singer Sappho, Peking Dukās Keli Holiday, Kiwi roots-pop act Muroki, Melbourneās avant-garde experimentalists Eggy, and Adelaideās punk-pop indie darlings Teenage Joans, just to name a smattering.
INFAMOUS FOR the huge laneway parties that turn Tattersalls Lane into the heaving heart of the CBD. Always a highlight for Melbourne Music Weekās Live Music Safari.
Already a Melbourne icon, Section 8 is the perfect example of why Melbourne has the best nightlife in Australia. It hasnāt come easy ā their founder told us years back heād spent over $50,000 defending noise complaints ā but as any punter can tell you, itās worth every cent. Support the crazy yet loveable Section 8 by heading along to 27-29 Tattersalls Lane in Melbourne.
In the leafy-green and natural-light filled beer garden, you can also tuck into their food menu, previously boasting Michelintrained chefs in their kitchen turning the dial up on traditional pub fare. A cursory glance reveals marinated olives, edamame and cheese croquettes and smoky miso baba ghanoush. If you work nearby, thereās also the express lunch deals (roast pork belly tonnato, sandwiches or soups) for a tidy $18. Catch a gig at NSC this month by heading to 301 High Street in Northcote.
FAMOUS FOR its rather unorthodox nature. Who converts some old freight containers into a makeshift bar and parks them down a side street? Thereās a good reason they call it Section 8, after all.
BEAT.COM.AU36 VENUE SPOTLIGHTS
Section 8 is the term used by the US military to describe the discharge of a soldier on mental health grounds. If you remem ber the classic TV show M.A.S.H, youāll know that Klinger was constantly trying to get out of Korea on a Section 8 clause.
Northcote Social Club
While the setting is all very casual and relaxed, Section 8 offer a proper cocktail menu. Sure, you can get yourself a frosty cold one (they stock boutique beers from around the world), but if youāre after something more elaborate they also offer mulled wine, rum and gin sours, a modern flip on the classic old fashioned and more. Donāt let the outdoor setting fool you, the staff know their cocktails and appreciate that even a simple vodka, lime and soda benefits from a little attention to detail.
LIVE MUSIC on High Street is at home at Northcote Social Club, which boasts some of the best local lineups in Melbourne.


FAMOUS FOR the aforementioned roast, among other culinary delights. The Stingo is famed for its affordable, unpretentious menu with fantastic attention to detail. With nightly specials, you can take your pick.
INFAMOUS FOR the Stingoās famous Shit Pub Trivia, without doubt the shittest pub trivia in Melbourne. The trivia experts grace many Melbourne venues, but Monday nightās the perfect night for shit trivia and thatās when then theyāre at the Stingo.
Wednesday nights are for Stingo Bingo ā self described āabso lute madnessā ā which, if youāre lucky, features dance karate. Youāve been warned.
140 years young, The Yorkshire Stingo is an Abbotsford icon. A beautifully renovated example of the best of Melbourne pub architecture, the Yorkshire Stingo has been a northside pillar for as long as anyone can remember ā itās everything a great pub should be, and more.
The real standout is still the food here though. Thereās a really exciting mix of bona-fide classics, fresh takes on popular dishes, and entirely new and unusual creations. Youād be forgiven for being suspicious of nasi goreng or a Nepalese goat curry on a pub menu ā at the Yorkshire Stingo, youād be forgiven for orderingWithboth.an old-school front bar, a casual dining room, a dog-friendly beer garden with a wall-length mural, arcade machines out the back, rave-reviewed musical bingo, expert trivia, and live music every Saturday and Sunday, this Abbotsford favourite has just about everything for everyone. Head down to the Yorkshire Stingo every day of the week on 48 Hoddle Street in Abbotsford.
The Yorkshire Stingo takes its name, like many Melbourne pubs, from an English forefather built in the 18th century. The āStingoā aspect is antiquated slang for a strong ale that would literally sting the tongue. Youāll be happy to note it lives up to that namesake with a superb drinks menu; dark beers, porter, stout, Talisker single-malt scotch and a comprehensive wines list.
37 BEAT MAG
LIVE MUSIC is what The Night Cat is famous for, or should we say The Night Catās live music is what Fitzroy is famous for. The Night Cat is, without doubt, one of the best live music venues in Melbourne.
INFAMOUS FOR the eclectic lineups and even more diverse crowds. Donāt be surprised if a single weekend contains psyche delic trash-jazz, dark tech-house, post-Soviet hip hop, and a bachata and salsa dance class.
What can this publication say about The Night Cat that we havenāt already said since it first opened back in 1996. Itās an institution thatās occupied a special place in our heart and often the last port of call on any successful night out northside. Its major strength is the ability to attract uber-cool international acts and balance them with excellent Melbourne talent. In the space of a couple of weeks this month, The Night Cat will host the dancefloor-angled jazz of English multiinstrumentalist Emma-Jean Thackray, the alt-pop stylings of Kiwi group Yumi Zouma, Melbourne industrial group My Disco, and local psych-jazz fusion band Proto Moro. Itās no surprise then, that the venue has played a major role in the formation of some of our best talent. The Cat Empire, The Bamboos, 30/70 all cut their teeth on the classic Meyer soundThesystem.Night Cat host their popular late night Better Late sessions every Friday and Saturday from 11pm ātil late, featuring the best DJs, as well as international and local headliners. Keeping us all on our toes, theyāre also particularly famous for their salsa and bachata classes with live Latin bands every Sunday. Check it all out for yourself, head to The Night Cat on 137-141 Johnston Street in Fitzroy.
FAMOUS FOR the central stage with a 360-degree viewing angle, allowing lucky punters to witness some of the best emerging and left-field acts from around the world, up close and personal.
The Night Cat
LIVE MUSIC every weekend, courtesy of Stingo Saturdaysdishing out some fine acoustic sets - and Stingo Blues on a Sunday, an afternoon of soulful bluesy goodness best paired with a Sunday roast, which all takes place in the venueās fabulous beer garden.
Yorkshire Stingo


BEAT.COM.AU38
Speaking over the phone from her Northcote home, Cash Savage warns there might be some noise from an ill-timed roof cleaner organised by body corporate. Savage has returned to the inner-city after moving to her hometown of Port Albert during the pandemic.
Words by Andrew Handley
Credit Richard Clifford SAVAGECASH

Fortunately, Cash Savage and The Last Drinks are perform ing in front of live audiences again. Known for their emotive performances, Savage says she likes to feel the songs when writing them. āI can sort of tell if the song is good because it hits me in the feels, so itās not something that Iām necessarily going for, but itās definitely something that I lean into.ā
āItās a little less outwardly political, a little more introspec tive of my own life the last couple of years. Not that itās a downer, fucking lockdown album. Maybe it is, I have no fucking idea. The first song āPushā is written from being locked in a fucking apartment, and my entire world turning to shit.ā
āOur drummerās snare broke in the third song, and if you watch any of the clips heās holding the snare together in his hand while playing. He knew the vibe was too good⦠so he plays through the whole thing with a broken snare, which our sound engineer had to fix in post.ā
When performing live, youāll mostly see Savage striding across the stage with only a microphone in hand, though she writes the music with her guitar. āI have written a couple of songs on the piano before because Iāve been learning piano slowly over my life, but my main instrument is guitar,ā she says.
Cash Savage and The Last Drinks will play at the newly refurbished Northcote Theatre on Saturday, September 3 before heading back to Europe for the second time this year. āIāve realised there are more venues on High Street than there are in Adelaide, Sydney and Perth combined,ā jokes Savage. āThereās like nine venues on that strip now ā itās amazing. I live just near it, so Iām all for venues on High Street, theyāre walking distance from my house.ā
BEAT MAG39
āI actually really love playing guitar on stage, but I know itās a better show when I donāt, not because of my guitar playing, but itās much easier for me to engage with the audience. Instead of thinking about the guitar and the vocals, Iām thinking about the crowd and the vocals, and I think itās a better show.ā
Cash Savage is playing The Northcote Theatre on September 3. āTheyād spent two days setting up, and we basically came in like Krusty the Clown [and] did one song to get the levels, and then we smashed it out for 40 minutes,ā she laughs. āThey were like āgreat, can you do that one more time?ā and we were like ānope, thatās the one.ā
āI usually write the bare bones of them myself, and then take them to the band at some point,ā she says. āSome of them are more finished than others⦠it might just be a verse with a little cool idea and I take it to see what happens with that.ā
As bandleader, Savage writes the songs before bringing them to the band.
āEverything Iāve learnt DJing has been in front of people. Itās a funny way to learn a trade⦠where you donāt want to fuck it up, but also it gets a bit loose so it gets fucked up, and then you just have to roll with it. Itās definitely my style of learning, itās not something I was actively pursuing, but here I am, Iām a DJ. I told Carlson he should get shirts that say āCash Daddy is a real DJ.āā
āWe did a show a month ago that was originally booked for June 2020, but the actual negotiation for the deal happened in December 2019, so how long do you want to talk about the sameThegig?āband hasnāt released a studio album since 2018ās politically charged Good Citizens, however, they recorded a live album at Hamer Hall albeit without an audience. āIt was pretty intense,ā says Savage. āIt was just before Melbourne went into that really long lockdown, and the [daily] cases were 20 or 25, and we all got the vibe we were going into a lockdown.ā The band recorded the album in a single, continuous take. āWe decided to arrange it so there was never going to be any dead air, and I didnāt want to be in there waiting for the song to start in an empty room,ā says Savage.
While having seven members in the band creates a powerful live sound, it can lead to complications. The bandās Melbourne Recital Centre show for October last year was moved once due to capacity restrictions, and then again as the band had unknowingly rehearsed with a band member with Covid days before the show. Another member caught Covid before the third date but was able to be replaced and the show went ahead. āYou want to move forward you know,ā explains Savage. āThese gigs to me are like zombies.
Adding to her repertoire, Savage has recently picked up DJing alongside the enigmatic Our Carlson as one of his rotating DJs. āItās pretty loose when I DJ with Carlson,ā she says. āI jumped on doing that because I really vibe what heās doing, and since then Iāve sort of started to learn how to DJ, which is a bit of a win.ā
The band has already recorded their next studio album, though it wonāt be released until early next year due to vinyl short ages. Savage is reluctant to describe the album as she is ātoo close to itā but says āitās definitely different to Good Citizens.ā
āIt was good for the first part,ā she recalls of the experience at the coastal town three hours out of Melbourne, with a population of under 300 people. āIt was like having a retirement in the middle of my life. I got to do a lot of fishing, tinkered in my shed and turned into a real old bloke.ā
āTheyād spent two days setting up, and we basically came in like Krusty the Clown [and] did one song to get the levels, and then we smashed it out for 40 minutes,ā she laughs. āThey were like āgreat, can you do that one more time?ā and we were like ānope, thatās the one.ā
As the leader of the seven-piece alt-country/post-punk group Cash Savage and The Last Drinks, it seems that Savage isnāt quite ready for retirement yet. āEventually I got really fuck ing bored with that,ā she says. āIt was good when we naively thought [lockdown] was going to be a short period of time, but as the time went on it just got harder and harder.ā Not only did the lockdowns affect Savageās mental health, but the trajectory of the band. āI guess when I was in it I hoped that it wouldnāt slow us down, given that everyone was in the same boat, but it has had an effect on momentum,ā she explains. āItās a very heavy object to get moving, and when itās moving itās easy to keep moving. āPeople are reluctant to buy tickets, and I absolutely get that. It seems to be back to a walk-up crowd, which is nerve-wracking because itās much more comfortable going to a show knowing how the tickets are selling. It seems to be across the board, so itās hard to know if itās a momentum shift or thereās a change in the way people interact with music.ā
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FUCKJAZZ + APPLEMAN Bodriggy Brewing Company. Abbotsford. 6pm. FREE. STRATHMORE SECONDARY COLLEGE: JAZZ NIGHT The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 7.30pm. $20. SeptemberFriday 9 BLUES ALLEY (1AM SESSION) Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 11.45pm. $10. BAGFUL OF BEEZ + MARCEL BORRACK TD BAND Gem Bar. Collingwood. 9pm. MATT WALKER Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 8pm. $28.15. LYN BOWTELL Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm. DUSTY DIMES The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 8.30pm. FREE. NOAH COLEMAN Post Office Hotel. Coburg. 9pm. FREE. FOLK IN THE ROAD. MUSAIC Some Velvet Morning. Clifton Hill. 7.30pm. FREE. DANIEL REEVES BAND The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. BRET MOSLEY The TaproomShedshaker Brewing Company. VIC. 7.30pm. FREE. DOOMSDAY PILOT. P.L., SKIN THIEF Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 8pm. $15.43. SCOTT DARLOW Hotel Esplanade (aka The Espy). St Kilda. 8.30pm. FREE. THE PERSECUTIONELECTRICVANKEYS.PURRS,BLUES Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $10. DAY DREAMERS. EMMA YUE, THE BRADS The B.East. Brunswick East. 9pm. FREE. A MAN CALLED SON. OCEANS, BEYONCEāSFIANCĆS Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 7.30pm. FREE. THY ART IS MURDER. CARNIFEX, MALEVOLENCE, I AM Northcote Theatre. Northcote. 7pm. $66.60. GUILTFILTER. EAT THE DAMN ORANGE, DOGGEREL Bad Decisions Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. $10. RETRO ROCK AT THE OLD BAR FEAT: FLITCRAFT, KINGāS LEVITATINGVENGEANCE,CHURCHES Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. $15. MAGNOLIA RD. WALIENS, OLYMPIC WHITE, GEISHA GUY Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 8pm. $12.75. EMMA-JEAN THACKRAY Night Cat. Fitzroy. 7.30pm. $54.90. LEE JONES TRIO Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. REBECCA BARNARD QUARTET Kew Court House. . 8pm. $24 -30. DOGI KATZ. HUNNY MACHETE, RACERAGE Colour Club. Carlton. 7.30pm. $17.57. THE RADIOHEAD PROJECT WITH AMELIA EVANS Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 8.30pm. $40. CJ COMMERFORD & THE SUPERTONES. VELVET BLOOM Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $40. GIANNI MARINUCCI NONET FEATURING EMMA GILMARTIN The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $30 - 35. THE BOĆTE SPRING FESTIVAL: THE FARAWAY TRIO AT THE ORATORY Abbotsford Abbotsford.Convent.7.30pm. $30. MOUNT KUJO Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. NGV FRIDAY NIGHTS: BIRDSNAKE + PJENNE NGV - National Gallery of Victoria. Melbourne. 6pm. $16 - 40.
BEAT MAG41
8 AUNTY BLUE. EVE MORDEN, ARAMINTA Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. $10 - 15. THE DEADBEATS. TRASH & THE TREASURES, TOO FAR GONE Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $10. DAG. SCREEN PLAY, CRISIS ACTOR Bar 303. Northcote. 7.30pm. DAVEY LANE Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. MUCH LOVE PRESENTS: SAPPHIRE STREET + ERIS The Bergy Seltzer. Brunswick. 8.30pm. DREAMING SODA. CHLOE THE BRAND, JACQUI LUMSDEN Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 8pm. $12.75. EMILY WILLIAMS: WOMEN OF COLOUR Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $45. HOT STEPPIN FEAT: MXMIX, ANNA B, 3RD ORBIT, HEDCHEF Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. XPANDER FEAT: UEFFHOE, FRONT RIGHT SPEAKER, HARRISON, JON ISK Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $12.57. GRETA WILLIAMS Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm. DANIEL WADDINGHAM Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. BUD WILKINS Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. OSCAR LADELL The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. JACKIE BORNSTEIN: GREAT WOMEN OF JAZZ Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $40. REUNITED WITH ANGELA & JERSON Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 7pm. $45.
SeptemberThursday
Gigs beat.com.au/gigguidemoreForāSep08Events+Oct01.thousandsgigsheadto
42 BEAT.COM.AU TAāSIA + TAMAHAU Brunswick Artistsā Bar. Brunswick. 5.30pm. FREE. BELOW BRIDGE: A BIRTHDAY CELEBRATION FEAT: SADIVA, LANCE HARRISON, WALLA C, SOJU GANG, DJ NOKIA 3210, MONOLITH, TURBO THOT Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. TEMPLE: TRANCE MISSION. CLOUDY KU, YOLLKS Colour Club. Carlton. 10pm. $17.57. CROOKED COLOURS. PACIFIC AVENUE, KINDER Margaret Court Arena. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $59.90. NGV FRIDAY NIGHTS: BIRDSNAKE + PJENNE NGV - National Gallery of Victoria. Melbourne. 6pm. $16 - 40. LANEOUS Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. OWOS Melbourne.Ferdydurke.8pm.FREE.
SeptemberFriday 16 KGOMOTSO HOSTS AMAPIANO Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. ASPET PRESENTS: TONI YOTZI + BAYU. CLOUDY KU, YOLLKS Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $17.57. OPIUO. JORDAN DENNIS Northcote Northcote.Theatre.7pm.$66.30. MIGHTIEST OF GUNS. MOODY BEACHES, THE HOT BLOODS Northcote Social Club. 8.30pm.Northcote.$24. MEAN JEANS (1AM SESSION) Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 11.45pm. $10. SNARK. P.L., SKIN THIEF Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 8pm. $27.70.
SeptemberThursday 15 SUPER DIVER. VIOLET, HUNTING FOXES Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. ARTIE STYLES QUARTET Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. $10. MINGUS THINGUS Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $40. ELR The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 7.30pm. $20 - 25. ROMAN XAVIER Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. ANDY MARTIN Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. MATTHEW GILBERT & THE DWELLERS. SAINT VICTOIRE, SCOTT CANDLISH The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 7.30pm. $20. RAGTIME TAVERN OPEN PIANO Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 6.30pm. FREE. OPEN MIC NIGHT The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 7pm. FREE. 56K RECORDS Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. BLUSHāKO & THE LAZY BOYS. DAN ROCK Bodriggy Brewing Company. Abbotsford. 6pm. FREE.
Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $15.87. THE LAST MARTYR Stay Gold. Brunswick. 7pm. $19.95. PEACH FUR The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 8pm. $23.20.
POP WILL EAT ITSELF. SNOG, DUBROW Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8pm. $65. DāARCY SPILLER Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $18.40. BADGERS (1AM SESSION) Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 11.45pm. $10. HOSS. TRUE SOUND Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 8pm. $22.59. EARLY LOVERS ROCK Night Cat. Fitzroy. 11pm. $18.15. DEADWEIGHT80. THE ORPHAN, THOSE LEFT BEHIND, TROMBONE,SWORDFISHVAULTHILL
CANNONBALL WITH CHANTAL MITVALSKY The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $30 - 35.
DIMITRIāS EXTRAVAGANZARAGTIMERagtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. CARABINERS #3: A VERY QUEER EXTRAVAGANZA (LIL BROWN GIRL TAKEOVER) Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 7pm. $18 - 40. PINKO COLLECTIVE Bar 303. Northcote. 3.30pm. FREE. SNAPSHOT. BEAUTIFUL SAVAGES Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 4pm. FREE. RINSE OUT FEAT: NATURAL ONE, NO NAME NATH, A13, JPS, HANS DC, C:1, MIKE HUNT Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. THREEāS COMPANY WITH BLACK TIGER Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. OCTANE PART II FEAT: CHRIS TOFF, SINISTER, SHAYDOE, AIDEN SCOTT, MORE Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $23.67. INTERNAL. PILLOW PRO, SIRAK ABU, ROMĆO Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $12.57. HOUSEWIFEāS CHOICE SOUND SYSTEM PRESENTS SERAPHIM The Toff In Town. Melbourne. 9pm. $20. OUR CARLSON The Curtin. Carlton. 8.30pm. $17.75. MORTAL CADENCE #3: HIP-HOP SHOWCASE & FREESTYLE CYPHER FEAT: STRICTLY DT, TRIX WILLIAM, AERO.D Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. $10. ON REPEAT: LIL PEEP NIGHT Stay Gold. Brunswick. 11.15pm. $20.
CARUS THOMPSON. DEAR MATILDA Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 1pm. $29.10. HAY FEVER FEAT: SWEET TALK, JAMES ELLIS & THE JEALOUS GUYS, WOODY PITNEY, HANNAH & JESSIELEEāS BAD HABITS, DANNY WALSH BANNED, EILS & THE DRIP, NORWOOD Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 3pm. $34.70. TOR + FUTURE BOYS Gem Bar. Collingwood. 4pm. NINA ROSE & THE SMASHING EVOS Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 5pm. FREE. MATT DWYER TRIO The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 9pm. FREE. ZAK SHEPHERD TRIO The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. SHAKY STILLS Gem Bar. Collingwood. 9pm. FREE. I HOLD THE LIONāS PAW Night Cat. Fitzroy. 7.30pm. $18.15. PBS FM PRESENTS SOULA-GO-GO: PIERRE BARONI TRIBUTE Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 6.30pm. THE BILLY JOELS Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 1pm. $33.76. JACKIE QUARTETBORNSTEIN Classic Southside. Elsternwick. 8pm. $30. REBECCA BARNARD QUARTET Kew Court House. . 8pm. $24 -30. JESSICA YOUNG QUINTET Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 5.30pm. $45. MARIO BRODER & BAND PRESENTS: BALANCO DIFERENTE Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $40. STEVE SEDERGREEN TRIO Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $44.
SeptemberSaturday 10
BEAT MAG NEW RACKET FEAT: BIFF, HEAVY AMBER,
Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $10. RAISED AS WOLVES. OKAY DANE The B.East. Brunswick East. 9pm. FREE. MAMMAL. KING OF THE NORTH, THE KITE MACHINE, STEALING MOSS Max Wattās. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $44.90. JAPE SQUAD Post Office Hotel. Coburg. 9pm. FREE. WINTER SUN + BAZ BLAKENEY Lyrebird Lounge. Ripponlea. 7.30pm. $10. STIFF RICHARDS. BABY MULLET, CUTTERS The Curtin. 8.30pm.Carlton.$22.85. HOPKINS CREEK PRESENTS NIGHT CAT OASIS Night Cat. Fitzroy. 9pm. $23.24. SKABHANGERS Bar 303. Northcote. 7.30pm.
SPEED Stay Gold. Brunswick. 7pm. $25. EMO NIGHT Max Wattās (Melbourne). . 8pm. $24.50.
PETTICOAT JUNCTION Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 5.30pm. $40. GRACE KNIGHT Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $55. VINCE JONES The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $45. ELK FEATURING JOHN BENNETT Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. SUPAY VERON The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. NGV FRIDAY NIGHTS: SURPRISE CHEF + COLLEGE OF KNOWLEDGE NGVNational Gallery of Victoria. Melbourne. 6pm. $16 - 40.
PHOEBE PARSONS Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. JUMP THE SHARK The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 9pm. FREE. PROTO MORO. NIKODIMOS Night Cat. Fitzroy. 11pm. $15. MARGOT PETRIE Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm. LISA RICHARDS Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 5pm. FREE. THE MOHAMEDEXPERIENCE.CAMARA Paris Cat Jazz Melbourne.Club.9pm. $40. KEVIN BORICH EXPRESS Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $44. VINCE JONES The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $45. NAT BARTSCH Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. SKUNKHOUR The Croxton. Thornbury. 7.30pm. $55.60. PLASTIC CHEESES. SUN KINGS, WINKSY Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 7pm. FREE.
RAISED. THE CITY, OPEN SKIES The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 1pm. $23.20. RUBY JONES + LORETTA MILLER. BABY VELVET The Curtin. Carlton. 8.30pm. $27.95. PLASTIC CHEESES. SUN KINGS, WINKSY Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 7pm. FREE. SOUTH SUMMIT Yah Yahās. Fitzroy. 9pm. $17.48. HANA & JESSIE-LEEāS BAD HABITS + BROOKE RUSSEL & THE MEAN REDS Gem Bar. Collingwood. 8pm. CHECKERBOARD LOUNGE Brunswick Brunswick.Ballroom.1pm.$23.05.
ROSARIO DE MARCO Merri Bar. Preston. 5pm. KATANKIN The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. SNAPSHOT. SUBURBAN SPELL Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 4pm. FREE. OPERATOR Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. PUNCHBOWL DISCO FEAT: COLETTE, NEFERTITIMOTHAFUNK,LANEGRASection 8. Melbourne. 6pm. FREE. TONY KINGāS VIDEO DISCO FEAT: TONY KING, DISCO NOT DISCO DJS, ANDREW MCCLELLAND Trades Hall. Carlton. 6pm. $15 - 20. SeptemberThursday 22 DALLAS CRANE & THE CASANOVAS. ZOMBEACHES, ANDRE WARHURST & THE RARE BYRDS Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $40.40. SENSIBLE SOIREE WITH COOL OUT SUN. PARVYN, MORE Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8pm. $18.40. PUBLIC HOLIDAY EVE: THE INDIGOS Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. DR SUREāS UNUSUAL PRACTICE + BENCH PRESS Night Cat. Fitzroy. 8pm. $20. THE STREET FIGHTER II + SECRET HEADLINER. THE ORPHAN, THOSE LEFT BEHIND, TROMBONE,SWORDFISHVAULTHILL Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $25. THE MEANIES. ROT TV, MONEY FOR ROPE Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 6.30pm. $33.76. THE TERRYS The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 7.30pm. $13. 2RU + IGLOO BATHHOUSE Nighthawks. Collingwood. 6pm. $15.
THE DISTANT SOUTH Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. CHARLIE BEDFORD The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 8.30pm. FREE. WINTER SUN + BAZ BLAKENEY Lyrebird Lounge. Ripponlea. 7.30pm. $10. SUPAY VERON The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. B-SIDE BTS Stay Gold. Brunswick. 9pm. $17.48. SeptemberSaturday 17 MARIANAS TRENCH Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. YUMI ZOUMA Night Cat. Fitzroy. 7.30pm. $40.68. THE SOUL-LUTION Bar 303. Northcote. 7pm. $15. ON REPEAT: HAMILTON PARTY Stay Gold. Brunswick. 11.15pm. $20. SETH SENTRY Northcote Theatre. Northcote. 7.30pm. $56.10.
THE RESTLESS, THE REFUGE Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 6.30pm. $23.75. THE RACCOONS Gem Bar. Collingwood. 8pm. FLYING TWENTYRHINOSAUR,DUTCHMAN.IMPERIAL
MAGGIENICOTEENAGERS,THETHEPILLS,AMONG
BIN NIGHT ROMEOS Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $5. JEFF MARTIN Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 8.30pm. $59.77.
TONY KINGāS VIDEO DISCO FEAT: TONY KING, DISCO NOT DISCO DJS, ANDREW MCCLELLAND Trades Hall. Carlton. 6pm. $15 - 20. EGGY. PROGRAM, DELIVERY Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $24. TROUBLE PEACH. BLACK BATS, LAURA INGRAM, GREG FOLETTA Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. $15. GUSH (1AM SESSION) Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 11.45pm. $10. TERRA. THE COMFORT, WOLF & CHAIN Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 7.30pm. $24.90.
VANISHING POINT. BLACK MAJESTY, TERAMAZE Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $29.10. LIFE DEPRIVED Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. BERNADETTE NOVEMBRE The B.East. Brunswick East. 9pm. FREE. FRANK BELL The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. NIA ARCHIVES NIGHT CAT. FITZROY. 9PM. $39.90. SHUTDOWN: GRIME NIGHT Stay Gold. Brunswick. 11.15pm. $15.30 - 20. TASMAN KEITH PRESENTS: A COLOUR UNDONE. PHIL FRESH Colour Club. Carlton. 8pm. $25. FOREVER 80S Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $50. I LOVE U ELTON WITH NITIDA Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. FREE. SNAPSHOT. THE MOTH BODY DUO Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 4pm. FREE. HOMEBASS Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. GRAND FINAL DAY: CAMRYN JORDANS + WILLOWBANK GROVE The Yorkshire Stingo Hotel. 6.30pm.Abbotsford.FREE. AMELIA ALLAN Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 5pm. FREE. HALF CUT HICKS Micawber Tavern. 9.30pm.Belgrave.FREE.
BEAT.COM.AU44LATIN PARTY AT PRIDE WITH DEL BARRIO & FRIENDS Pride Of Our Footscray Community Bar. Footscray. 7pm. $20. ROSS ANDERSON Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm. QUEEN OF HEARTS W/ LUCHA PERFORMANCELIBREFEAT: CARLO CANNON & FRIENDS The B.East. Brunswick East. 9pm. FREE. RALEIGH WILLIAMS DOES AMY WINEHOUSE Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 7pm. $45. MAHALIA BARNES + THE SOUL MATES Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.45pm. $50. THE PEARLY SHELLS SWING ORCHESTRA The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 7.30pm. $30 - 35.
SeptemberSaturday 24
23 TEENAGE JOANS. CRY CLUB, BEC STEVENS Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. CHOOF. FESTERING GENITAL ORIFICE, NEMBUTOLIK Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. FREE. THE UGLY KINGS. TRUE SOUND Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 8pm. $20.03. THE ROLLERCANES. THE JIVES, TIN POT CLAY MAN Leadbeater Hotel. Richmond. 8pm. $17.85. MODALITY. ULTRAVLT, NTH RD, EVERLYNE Stay Gold. Brunswick. 7pm. $19.95. ST. EMERALD. SEAMUS MCCORRY, THE BRADS Sooki Lounge. Belgrave. 8pm. $19.40. WHATāS MY AGE AGAIN? EMO & PUNK PARTY FEAT: GREEN PHASE, DJ CAMERON HULL, DJ BRYCEY Bad Decisions Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. $15. FLEETMAC WOOD PRESENTS NIGHTS WONDERS DISCO Night Cat. Fitzroy. 11pm. $42.56 - 44.60. THE SPACEFUNK ENSEMBLE. BENG, POCKĆ Bar 303. Northcote. 7.30pm. THE MARTINI SET Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. JESS FAIRLIE Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 6pm. $40. LABCATS The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $30 - 35. BRET MOSLEY The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. NGV FRIDAY NIGHTS: HARVEY SUTHERLAND (DJ SET) + POLITO + VINCENT SOLE NGV - National Gallery of Victoria. Melbourne. 6pm. $16 - 40. BECKAH AMANI Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm.
FURNACE & FUNDAMENTALS.THE KING OF THE NORTH,, THE KITE MACHINE, STEALING MOSS Max Wattās. Melbourne. 7pm. $45.90. STEVAN The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 8pm. $18.10. STAYING LATE Micawber Tavern. Belgrave. 7.30pm. FREE. NTER + NOOKY. 046, FILTHY FIL, DOUBLE S DONS Laundry Bar. Fitzroy. 7pm. $45. MATT TRIGGE TRIO Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. JAY HOWIE The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 8.30pm. FREE. TRADITIONAL IRISH MUSIC SESSION The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 6pm. FREE. FAB FOLK NIGHT II FEAT: BILLY BARKER, MOLLY ALANA MCKEW, MAISIE PEARLE, JACK WILDER Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 7pm. $15. DIGITAL MUSIC ONLY (DMO). NENAGH, GEORGIA BIRD, DESILVA, MABEL, PRIMITIVE NEEDS, RENZO Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $17.57. MICHELLE NICOLLE SINGS GORGEOUS MOVIE SONGS Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 5.30pm. $40. MOHINI & PARAMA PADAM: LIFEāS GAME OF SNAKES & LADDERS
The Ian Potter Centre for Performing Arts. Clayton. 8pm. $5 - 120. THE FIVE GEMS OF LALGUDI
The Ian Potter Centre for Performing Arts. Clayton. 6pm. FREE. SOUL CHIC Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $40. JANINE MAUNDER Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 8.30pm. $45.
SOLOMON SISAY & HIS BAND Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $45. GEORGIA SWINGTETBROOKS Paris Cat Jazz Club. 8.30pm.Melbourne.$45.
CAT & BULL CLUB Bar 303. Northcote. 7.30pm. THE SNIPPERS Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. KARLO ARCINUE The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 9pm. FREE. RYAN MARTIN JOHN The Drunken Poet. West Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. OSCAR LADELLE. DJ DADDY Bodriggy Brewing Company. Abbotsford. 6pm. FREE. RAGTIME TAVERN OPEN PIANO Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 6.30pm. FREE. FJ STEELE Wesley Anne. Northcote. 6pm. SHANAE. NAYNAY, SMILEZ, P DAZEY, X8NDER.M Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. FREE. SANDRIINA Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. STRICTLY DRUM N BASS III FEAT: TONI YOTZI, PUGILIST, MORE Colour Club. Carlton. 9pm. $22.65. MUCH LOVE PRESENTS: BRODIE + CROFTY The Bergy Seltzer. Brunswick. 8.30pm.
SeptemberFriday
For a full gig list visit wesleyanne.com.au BAND ROOM Thursday 8 September Still Here by Dave & the Daves Friday 9 September Lyn Bowtell Saturday 17 September Margot Petrie Friday 23 September Beckah Amani Sunday 25 September Great Aunt Friday 30 September Georgia Rodgers FRONT BAR Thursday 8 September Greta Williams Sunday 11 September Izzy Hollingdale Tueday 13 September Sonny Campbell Sunday 18 September Scott Candlish Thursday 22 September FJ Steele Monday 25 September Beth Winter Friday 30 September Elk 250 High St, WesleNorthcotey Anney Anne Trivia with Sparx every Wednesday 7:30pm MON-WED $8 PINTS BEER & CIDER THURSDAYS $7 SELTZERS5PM$6GIN&VODKA BEER GARDEN ā¢ā¢ā¢ LIVE MUSIC ā¢ā¢ā¢ MONDAYSCOMEDYFREE BRUNSWICK 68 SYDNEY RD THEBERGYSELTZER.COM.AU


THE MAGGIE PILLS. BILLY CART, GRUPS The Bergy Seltzer. Brunswick. 8pm. FREE. ON REPEAT: KANYE WEST Night Night Cat. Fitzroy. 11pm. $13.05 - 20. TOUCH SENSITIVE MORNINGMAXWELLWITHHotel Esplanade (aka The Espy). St Kilda. 8.30pm. $33.05. MPMA FEAT: MR PITIFUL Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. ATABAQUE FEAT: MARIO BRODER, BILLY HOYLE, BOBBY BRAZUKA, WALLA C Section 8. Melbourne. 6pm. FREE. BEAT THERAPY Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. RUNNING TOUCH. JUNO MAMBA, TIFF CORNISH Forum Melbourne.Melbourne.7.30pm. $59.40.
THE FRINGE DWELLERS Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. MATT MALONE & THE HOLY SPIRITS (DUO) Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. HAY BAX Micawber Tavern. Belgrave. 7.30pm. FREE. PAUL VAN ROSS Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $45. SERGIO ERCOLE & NATHAN SLATER COLLABORATE Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 6pm. $40. ANDREW SWANN & THE SOUL AMBASSADORS Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 5.30pm. $40. KRAANIUM. ORGANECTOMY, INHIBITOR Stay Gold. Brunswick. 7pm. $36. MADDYOctoberSaturday1JANENorthcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $35.30.
VICIOUS BLONDE (1AM SESSION) Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 11.45pm. $10. THE BLOODS. THE DREADFUL TIDES, STEALING MOSS, GLASSHAWK, REIGN MAKER Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 7.30pm. $15.87. BOUDICCA FEAT: DIVE TEAM FIVE Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. DESECRATOR. IN MALICEāS WAKE, HARLOTT, MASON, KILLRAZER, IDLE RUIN, THE ASCENDED, FIRING SQUAD Max Wattās (Melbourne). . 4.30pm. $37.75. SPUTNIK SWEETHEART The Workers Club. Fitzroy. 8pm. $18.10. JORDIE LANE Brunswick Ballroom. Brunswick. 3pm. $38.86. THE DISTANT SOUTH The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 7pm. FREE. CLUNK ORCHESTRA FEAT: DIVE TEAM FIVE Bar 303. Northcote. 3.30pm. ADRIAN CUNNINGHAM & HIS OLD SCHOOL QUINTET (LATER SHOW) Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $45. ANDY SUGG & JOHN MACKEY PRESENT: THE MUSIC OF MICHAEL BRECKER Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $44. GO BANG HOSTED BY DJ CHERUB Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE. ONESEVENFOUR: OCT FEAT: ARTSEA, EDAN, ENFUSE, TALIX, SUPERCURVE The Toff In Town. Melbourne. 11pm. $10 - 15. NO REGRETS: THE EDITH PIAF STORY WITH NIKKI NOUVEAU Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 9pm. $45. MEL SEARLE: AN ELLA FITZGERALD TRIBUTE Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 6pm. $45.
KICKIN THE B AT 303: THURSDAY HAMMOND SESSIONS FEAT: DIVE TEAM FIVE Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. $20. DYLAN KNURāS OBSERVABLE UNIVERSE Edinburgh Castle Hotel. Brunswick. 6pm. FREE. FJ STEELE Daylesford Hotel. Daylesford. 6pm. FREE. RAGTIME TAVERN OPEN PIANO Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 6.30pm. FREE. FOGGY NOTION. MILLAR JUKES & THE MUSCLE, ALEX HAMILTON Old Bar. Fitzroy. 8pm. CLIK. DJ SHIO Bodriggy Brewing Abbotsford.Company.6pm.FREE. BLUE NOTE ā62 Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 7pm. $40. AMY, AMY, AMY Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $35.
FRAZEY FORD + MORE Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8pm. $46.
The Ian Potter Centre for Performing Arts. Clayton. 8pm. $5 - 120. AN EVENING WITH THE LALGUDI DUO The Ian Potter Centre for Performing Arts. Clayton. 5pm. $5 - 120. PARVYN SINGH
BEAT.COM.AU46NOTSO
BIG BAND: THE MUSIC OF FRANK SINATRA Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 6pm. $45. BLUE NOTE: A HISTORY OF JAZZ Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 5.30pm. $40. AUDREY POWNE The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $30 - 35. NEW DIMENSIONS TO THE MARGAM FEAT: VAIDYANATHANRAMA
The Ian Potter Centre for Performing Arts. Clayton. 7pm. $10 - 35.
SeptemberThursday 29
MAT JODRELL QUARTET The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 7.30pm. $20 - 25. VIOLENT COLLECTEDIMPULSE.SENSES Whole Lotta Love. Brunswick East. 8pm. SUDDEN DEBT. ORBITS, THE TECHNO BIDDIES Nighthawks. Collingwood. 7.30pm. $15. NAYCHA & THE COLLECTIVE Ferdydurke. Melbourne. 8pm. FREE.
SeptemberFriday 30 KEEāAHN. CHARLIE NEEDS BRACES Northcote Social Club. Northcote. 8.30pm. $24. FIRETAIL. BENG, POCKĆ Bar 303. Northcote. 8pm. ELK Wesley Anne. Northcote. 8pm. NINA FERRO & BAND Paris Cat Jazz Club. Melbourne. 8.30pm. $45. SOUL SACRIFICE Birdās Basement. Melbourne. 7.30pm. $44. NADAV RAYMAN TRIO + FRIENDS The Jazzlab. Brunswick. 8pm. $30 - 35. JUMPINā JACK JORDAN & FRIENDS Ragtime Tavern. Preston. 8pm. FREE. NGV FRIDAY NIGHTS: TRAFFIK ISLANDāS SHADOW BAND + SINA NGV - National Gallery of Melbourne.Victoria.6pm.$16 - 40. TRUCK Cherry Bar. Melbourne. 8pm. $20. CRUMBE The Thornbury Local. Thornbury. 8pm. FREE. BANGON! @ MAMMA CHENāS FEAT: DENIM OWL, TAMMY HAIDER, PRETTY IN PINK Mamma Chenās. Footscray. 8pm. FREE.
BEAT MAG47 GUITARSTUDY MAKING DESIGN BUILD SET UP REPAIR PLAY SUBSIDISED TUITION AVAILABLE | NO ATAR REQUIRED NCAT | Registered Training Organisation 6736 ncat.vic.edu.au | 03 9478 1333 22564VIC Certiļ¬cate IV in Instrument Making and Repair MUSICSTUDY + SOUND WRITE PRODUCE RECORD PERFORM TOUR CUA40920 Certiļ¬cate IV in Music (Performance) CUA40920 Certiļ¬cate IV in Music (Sound Production) SUBSIDISED TUITION AVAILABLE | NO ATAR REQUIRED NCAT | Registered Training Organisation 6736 ncat.vic.edu.au | 03 9478 1333 THU 8 SEP BUD WILKINS FRI 9 SEP LEETRIOJONES SAT 10 SEP NINA ROSE & THE SMASHINGEVOāS SUN 11 SEP RYAN STERLING THU 15 SEP ANDY MARTIN FRI 16 SEP THESOUTHDISTANT SAT 17 SEP LISA RICHARDS SUN 18 SEP LABRIOLAELISHA THU 22 SEP SNIPPERSTHE FRI 23 SEP THE MARTINISET SAT 24 SEP AMELIA ALLAN SUN 25 SEP LIAM WRIGHT THU 29 SEP FJ STEELE FRI 30 SEP MATT MALONE & THE SPIRITSHOLY FOR A FULL GIG LIST VISIT DAYLESFORDHOTEL.COM.AU 2SQUAREBURKE DAYLESFORD3460 TRIVIA WITH ANNA GO-GO ā WED 7.30PM






















































































